Fort SnellingMain MenuDakota History 1862-1863: The US-Dakota War, and the Innocent ImprisonedEducation + InterpretationInteractive MapCamp CensusBibliographyAll Sources used for the creation of this site.Genevieve Romain2780a176af9b081b887fccf1a2c9d8f66cc710a8Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e582Matthew D. Frater61f08a66ba71d0a84fb2368cda74dc64d2daa275Sarah Forschlerf112b97c780ede601526729005e344121cd2da0cAaron J. Person7682fe26670fdd393b11095bed5c9c2f5813574f
The Fort
12015-12-02T02:38:40-08:00Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e58271896plain2015-12-13T11:27:36-08:00Aaron J. Person7682fe26670fdd393b11095bed5c9c2f5813574fhttp://scalar.usc.edu/works/fort-snelling/history2-westwardexpansion.editIn 1805, Lieutenant Zebulon Pike of the United States Army conducted a treaty agreement with the Dakota Nation in which the United States acquired two large tracts of land now known as Pike's Purchase. This included the Bdote and surrounding lands. Shortly after the agreement was signed, the United States Department of War (under the secretaryship of John C. Calhoun) built a chain of forts across the American West with the intent to protect against a British invasion from Canada which never came to fruition. Constructed in 1819, Fort Saint Anthony was one of these forts. Upon its completion in 1825, it was renamed Fort Snelling in honor of its first commander, U.S. Army Colonel Josiah Snelling. The above image is a sketch of the site as it would have looked in the mid-1820s.
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1media/medicine bottle.jpgmedia/medicine bottle.jpg2015-12-01T23:39:42-08:00Dustin Sjong7d8b720b8272f145f79d27a161206c480703e582Dakota History 1862-1863: The US-Dakota War, and the Innocent ImprisonedMatthew D. Frater22image_header2102442015-12-13T22:24:02-08:00Matthew D. Frater61f08a66ba71d0a84fb2368cda74dc64d2daa275