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  2. Fort Kearny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Kearny

    Fort Kearny was a historic outpost of the United States Army founded in 1848 in the Western United States during the middle and late 19th century. The fort was named after Colonel and later General Stephen Watts Kearny. [1] The outpost was located along the Oregon Trail near Kearney, Nebraska. The town of Kearney took its name from the fort.

  3. Fort Kearny (Rhode Island) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Kearny_(Rhode_Island)

    Fort Kearny was a coastal defense fort in the Saunderstown area of Narragansett, Rhode Island from 1901 to 1943. It was a prisoner-of-war camp for German prisoners in 1945. It is now the Narragansett Bay Campus of the University of Rhode Island. In many sources it is spelled Fort Kearney.

  4. Fort Kearny (Washington, D.C.) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Kearny_(Washington,_D.C.)

    A closeup of an 1865 map of Washington, D.C.'s defenses, showing the location of Fort Kearny to the northeast of Tenleytown. Fort Kearny was a fort constructed during the American Civil War as part of the defenses of Washington, D.C. Located near Tenleytown, in the District of Columbia, it filled the gap between Fort Reno and Fort DeRussy north of the city of Washington.

  5. Stephen W. Kearny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_W._Kearny

    Stephen Watts Kearny was the fifteenth and youngest child of Philip and Susanna Watts Kearny. His father, who was of Irish ancestry (the family name had originally been O'Kearny), was a successful wine merchant and landowner in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, before the start of the American Revolution (1775–83). [3]

  6. Fort Phil Kearny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Phil_Kearny

    Fort Phil Kearny was an outpost of the United States Army that existed in the late 1860s in present-day northeastern Wyoming along the Bozeman Trail.Construction began in 1866 on Friday, July 13, by Companies A, C, E, and H of the 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry, under the direction of the regimental commander and Mountain District commander Colonel Henry B. Carrington.

  7. Route of the Oregon Trail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Route_of_the_Oregon_Trail

    The Lander Road, formally the Fort Kearney, South Pass, and Honey Lake Wagon Road, was established and built by U.S. government contractors in 1858-59. [17] It was about 80 miles (130 km) shorter than the main trail through Fort Bridger with good grass, water, firewood and fishing but it was a much steeper and rougher route, crossing three ...

  8. Fetterman Fight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetterman_Fight

    The Fetterman Fight, also known as the Fetterman Massacre or the Battle of the Hundred-in-the-Hands or the Battle of a Hundred Slain, [1] was a battle during Red Cloud's War on December 21, 1866, between a confederation of the Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes and a detachment of the United States Army, based at Fort Phil Kearny, Wyoming.

  9. Galvanized Yankees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galvanized_Yankees

    Companies A and B were stationed at Fort Kearney; C and D at Cottonwood, Colorado; E and F at Fort Rankin; and G and H at Julesburg, Colorado, protecting overland mail routes from Indian attacks. Companies I and K were sent to Fort Laramie , and on May 15, 1865, were parceled out in small detachments along 300 miles of the Pacific Telegraph ...