Everything about Fort Nisqually totally explained
Fort Nisqually was an important
fur trading and farming post of the
Hudson's Bay Company in the
Puget Sound area of what is now
Washington but in its heyday was part of the HBC's
Columbia Department. Today it's a
living history museum located in
Tacoma, Washington, USA, within the boundaries of
Point Defiance Park.
19th century history
Fort Nisqually was the first European trading post on the
Puget Sound. The vast British
fur trading enterprise, known as the
Hudson's Bay Company (HBC), established the fort in 1833.
William Fraser Tolmie spent the year there, writing about the region extensively in his journal. Fort Nisqually was located on the plains around the
Nisqually River Delta near the present town of
Dupont, Washington.
Fort Nisqually was operated and served by Scottish gentlemen, Native Americans, Kanakas (Hawaiians),
French-Canadians,
Metis,
West Indians, Englishmen and, in the last final years before the
British cession of their claims to
Puget Sound with the
Oregon Treaty, a handful of American settlers. Fort Nisqually grew from an obscure trading post to major international trading establishment. The fort's main export was beaver pelts that could be used for making a
beaver-pelt
top hat. Along with the
Puget Sound Agricultural Company, a subsidiary of HBC, Fort Nisqually also started to export livestock and crops for local consumption and export to Russian America,
Hawaii, Mexican
California,
Europe and
Asia. From 1843 to 1857, during the transition from British to American control, as well as the
Puget Sound War, Dr.
William Fraser Tolmie was
Chief Factor of Fort Nisqually as well as the manager of the Puget Sound Agricultural Company. He was well respected due to his experience with the region and friendly relations with British, American, and Indian peoples.
Fort Nisqually was never a military outpost and only one small military engagement was recorded in the fort's history. Nevertheless, American and British military forces occasionally visited the fort. The 1846
treaty between the United States and Great Britain established a compromise border between Canada and the United States at the
49th parallel which left Fort Nisqually on American soil. With the fur trade in decline and increasing harassment from American settlers, tax collectors, and revenue agents. In 1869, Fort Nisqually closed and the United States paid the
HBC $460,000 for its land.
Restoration
In the 1930's, Fort Nisqually was rebuilt in its current location in
Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, Washington. The restoration was part of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal program to provide jobs to the Depression stricken nation. The effort was funded and backed by the
WPA and the Tacoma Businessmen's Association. Only two buildings, the
granary and factor's house, were moved from their original locations, the rest having fallen into decay.
Fort Nisqually Today
Today, the restored Fort Nisqually is a living history museum run by employees and volunteers. Two of the original buildings, the Factor's House, and the Granary remain. In addition, there's a trade store, working black smith shop, laborers dwelling house, demonstration kitchen, and kitchen garden. Fort Nisqually has seen recent changes designed to capture its original character. These changes include, most significantly, the restoration of the Factor's House, and the relocation and restoration of the two 1930s era bastions. In addition a section of the pallisades wall is designed to replicate the 1847 era wall.
Archeology was conducted in 1988-89 to determine the placement, orientation and size of the northeast bastion and palisades wall. Hundreds of artifacts were discovered and catalogued and have added to the historical record. In addition, much research has been conducted using the original journals as well as hundreds of letters of Edward Huggins. Huggins was a clerk of the HBC who arrived in 1850. Huggins, originally a Londoner eventually became an American citizen and homesteaded the land and buildings after it was abandoned by the HBC. He lived on the land until 1906 when he died of colon cancer. The restored fort is managed by
Metro Parks Tacoma.
The original location near DuPont is owned and managed by
The Archaeological Conservancy, and is closed to the public. Logs mark the location of the original walls, but there are no buildings remaining. The only visible remnants of the original fort are a line of black locust trees, planted in the 1850s.
Further Information
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