The
unfinished Fort Jefferson is a massive coastal fortress, actually a largest
masonry structure in the United States. The Fort is beautifully composed with
more than 16 million bricks. The fort is located on Garden Key in the lower
Florida Keys within the Dry Tortugas National Park, about 110 km west of the
island of Key West. The massive fort construction started in 1846 and continued
for 30 years, but unluckily it was never finished. The development of rifled
cannon and armored ships made Fort Jefferson obsolete even while its
construction was under way. However, much of the work of fort building during
the years before the Civil War was done by enslaved laborers. Therefore, in
1847, one of the bravest attempts every made to escape slavery was made by seven
workers at the fort. However, commandeering or disabling as several schooners
and boats as they could, they set out from Garden Key in a frantic attempt to
sail away to freedom. The good-looking islands still do not exhibit any
standing fresh water or even seasonal streams, therefore the name
"dry". Owing to the potential difficulties of survival in such
conditions, one of these islands was used as the location for filming a
military survival film used to train aircraft personnel.
The Fort
Jefferson design called for a four-tiered six-sided 1000 heavy-gun fort, with
two sides measuring 415 feet, and four sides measuring 564 feet. The walls met
at corner bastions, which are large projections designed to let defensive fire
along the faces of the walls they joined. Fort Jefferson was designed to be a
huge gun platform, impervious to assault, and capable to destroy any enemy
ships foolhardy adequate to come within range of its powerful guns. The
fort remained in federal hands throughout the Civil War, however hostilities was
finished in 1865, the fort's population declined to 1,013, consisting of 486
soldiers or civilians and 527 prisoners. On January 4, 1935, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, who visited this place by ship, designated the area as Fort
Jefferson National Monument, but in 26, Oct 1992 the Dry Tortugas, including
Fort Jefferson, was established as a National Park.
Well, if you want to visit this
Fort, then can be reached by a daily ferry from Key West, as well as by
chartered seaplane and private yacht. As a national park, camping is allowed on
the beach. Tourists by ferry usually spend four hours on the island, which is
enough time for a guided tour of the fort, lunch on the boat and swim snorkel
equipment provided on the reef. The island has a gift shop but no food is
available for visitors. Fort Jefferson was built to protect one of the most
strategic deep-water anchorages by fortifying this spacious harbor. Due to its
imperativeness, it could also serve as a potential staging area, or springboard,
for enemy forces. From here they could launch an attack virtually anywhere
along the Gulf Coast. Fort Jefferson, the most sophisticated of these, was a
brilliant and undeniable symbol that the United States wanted to be left alone.
Though never attacked, the fort fulfilled its intended role. It helped to
protect the peace and prosperity of a young nation. Abandoned by the Army in
1874, the fort was later used as a coaling station for warships. Though used
briefly during both world wars, the fort’s final chapter as “Guardian of the
Gulf” had long since closed. Source: Charismatic Planet