Ad
related to: fort washington ohio map
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fort Washington was a fortified stockade with blockhouses built by order of Gen. Josiah Harmar starting in summer 1789 in what is now downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, near the Ohio River. The physical location of the fort was facing the mouth of the Licking River, above present day Fort Washington Way. The fort was named in honor of President George ...
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; ... Fort Washington (Ohio) This page was last edited on 31 May 2018, at 23:53 (UTC). Text ...
Fort Laurens, open to the public; Fort Meigs, open to the public; Fort Miamis; Fort Recovery, open to the public; Fort St. Clair; Fort Sandoské (1750) Fort Sandusky (1761) Fort Stephenson; Fort Steuben, open to the public; Fort Washington
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Fort Washington (Ohio) M. Fort Miami (Ohio) S. Fort Sandusky; Fort Steuben
Fort Washington was designed by Major John Doughty. Directly to the east of the fort, Doughty also laid out a garden and a peach orchard with saplings from Fort Harmar in Marietta Ohio. Dr. Richard Alison was the surgeon general for Fort Washington. In the 1790s he built a small house in the peach grove were Lytle Park now sits.
Fort Washington Way is an approximately 0.9-mile-long (1.4 km) section of freeway in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.The eight-lane divided highway is a concurrent section of Interstate 71 (I-71) and U.S. Route 50 (US 50) that runs from west to east from an interchange with I-75 at the Brent Spence Bridge to the Lytle Tunnel and Columbia Parkway.
near modern Fort Recovery, Ohio: Northwest Indian War 893+ Western Confederacy vs United States of America Attack on Fort St. Clair [8] November 9, 1792 modern Preble County: Northwest Indian War 10+ Miami vs Kentucky militia Siege of Fort Recovery: June 30-July 1, 1794 modern Fort Recovery, Ohio Northwest Indian War 43+
Washington was adamant for St. Clair to move north in the summer months, but various logistics and supply problems greatly slowed his preparations in Fort Washington (now Cincinnati, Ohio). The recruits were poorly trained and undisciplined, the food supplies were substandard, and the horses were low in number and poor quality.