Results for F
Staff Officers' Quarters
The U.S. Army built nine stone officers’ quarters at Fort ...
First Baptist Church / Mt. Olive CME Church
(Front Side):
First Baptist Church
The First B...
Commanding Officer's Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in June...
Confederate Navy Yard, Saffold
At Saffold, “accessible by steamboats from all points on t...
Confederate Field Hospital
Battle of Mill Springs
This is the site of the Confe...
Burial Site of Josette Beaubien
Josette Beaubien, a survivor of the Fort Dearborn Massacre...
Founding of Pi Beta Phi Fraternity
On April 28, 1867, the National Women's Fraternity Movemen...
The Gate City of South Florida
In 1842, the U.S. Government began to encourage settlers t...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852...
Site of Original Post Cemetery
This ground was Fort Clark’s military cemetery from 1856 t...
Results for F
Staff Officers' Quarters
The U.S. Army built nine stone officers’ quarters at Fort Clark beginning in 1873. The need soon arose for additional housing for senior staff officers, and this building was constructed in 1888. Built in a T-plan, the two-story stone duplex ...
First Baptist Church / Mt. Olive CME Church
(Front Side):
First Baptist Church
The First Baptist Church was designed by architect R. H. Hunt and built in 1906. It is constructed of yellow bricks along a Georgian-architectural style. It housed a congregation of 2,200 members which organized the first Sunday ...
Commanding Officer's Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in June 1852. Nine structures designed by U.S. Army engineers were built in 1873-1874 to house the fort's officers. This house served the fort's commanding officers, including Col. Ranald S. Mackenzie ...
Confederate Navy Yard, Saffold
At Saffold, “accessible by steamboats from all points on the river”, David S. Johnston operated the Southern Confederate States Navy Yard. Here the gunboat Chattahoochee was built under contract signed October 19, 1861. Lt. Catesby ap R. Jones, CSN, formerly ...
Confederate Field Hospital
Battle of Mill Springs
This is the site of the Confederate Hospital used by Confederate surgeons after the Battle of Mill Springs. The site is being preserved with the help of a Federal grant from the Land and Water Conservation Fund, ...
Burial Site of Josette Beaubien
Josette Beaubien, a survivor of the Fort Dearborn Massacre, was buried here in 1845. She was married to Jean Baptiste Beaubien, one of Chicago's first settlers. Her brother was Claude LaFramboise, a chief of the Potawatomi Indians. Chief Alexander Robinson ...
Founding of Pi Beta Phi Fraternity
On April 28, 1867, the National Women's Fraternity Movement began here in the home of Jacob Holt. In a second floor bedroom, shared by Ada Bruen and Libbie Brook, twelve Monmouth College co-eds founded I.C. Sorosis, known today by its ...
The Gate City of South Florida
In 1842, the U.S. Government began to encourage settlers to relocate to Florida by offering free land. Settlers came from all along the east coast, mostly Georgia, Virginia, and the Carolinas.
In 1870 Henry Sanford acquired 12,548 acres of land ...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852. The original quarters were crude log huts and houses of palisade construction. In 1857, a new program began to replace badly dilapidated structures with buildings of quarried stone.
Designed and ...
Site of Original Post Cemetery
This ground was Fort Clark’s military cemetery from 1856 to the 1880s. One of the first burials was 2nd Lt. Brayton C. Ives, 1st Inf., a West Point graduate who died here on June 27, 1857. Succeeding burials included dozens ...