3/23/24 - Teachers and Parents - Use the code "SPRINGBREAK" for 10 percent off of your subscription to the ad-free, full-content, unlimited students, plus much more MrNussbaum.com when you subscribe. Click "Sign up" in the upper right corner to start. Join thousands of teachers and parents and countless students who now enjoy the site with no distractions, tons more content and way more options! Only $29 per year.

Advertisement

Remove ad

This page describes the Battle of Fort Duquesne in the French and Indian War.

Fort Duquesne Postage Stamp

Battles of the French and Indian War - Fort Duquesne

First Major Event of the French and Indian War

The events at Fort Duquesne marked the first major event in the French and Indian War. In 1754, the area which included the source of the Ohio River was occupied by French settlers. English settlers, moving northwest from Virginia, hoped to colonize the area to take advantage of the region's abundant game. They built a small fort at the forks of the Ohio River known as Fort Prince George. A larger garrison of French settlers, however, arrived soon after and destroyed the fort. Fort Duquesne was built on its ruins.

Battles of Jumonville Glen and Great Meadows

In the spring of 1754, Major George Washington was sent to Fort Duquesne to discuss boundaries, and to persuade the French to leave the area peacefully. The French, however, refused to vacate the area. Washington returned to the region with a group of Virginia troops in an attempt to take the fort by force. On the way to the fort, Washington encountered a French scouting party. He attacked them near a place now known as Jumonville Glen, though at least one French soldier escaped. He then ordered construction of Fort Necessity, which was soon taken by the French after the Battle of Great Meadows. Fort Necessity was subsequently burned to the ground. The British again attempted to take Fort Duquesne in 1755, but were defeated by the French at the Battle of Monogahela.

Fort Duquesne Becomes Fort Pitt

The French occupied Fort Duquesne until 1758. In September 1758, Pennsylvania and Virginia militia, under the command of James Grant, were annihilated by French forces after storming the fort. The heads of dead British militia were impaled on stakes that encircled the fort as a warning against future British invasion. Nevertheless, the small British force was only a detachment of a much larger British force of 6,000 that had moved into the area. On November 26, 1758, the French burned Fort Duquesne to the ground before retreating. The British soon took over the remains, rebuilt the fort and named it Fort Pitt, after Prime Minister William Pitt.

 

Advertisement

Remove ad

Related activities

Advertisement

Remove ad