Fort Defiance (Illinois)

Fort Defiance Park is the brown colored rectangular area at the tip of the peninsula.

Fort Defiance, known as Camp Defiance during the American Civil War, is a former military fortification located at the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers near Cairo in Alexander County, Illinois. The strategic significance of the site has been known since prehistoric times with archaeological evidence of warfare dating to the Mississippian era. It is the southernmost park in the state of Illinois. At 279 feet (85 m) elevation, Fort Defiance Point is also Illinois' lowest point[1].

The park, formerly a state park, had been owned and maintained by the city of Cairo since the 1990s. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources assumed control of Fort Defiance on 31 July 2014 with the goal of returning it to state park status[2]. The park is a satellite of Horseshoe Lake State Fish and Wildlife Area.

History

On his trek up the Mississippi, Frenchman Pierre Laclède was among the first Europeans to land on the southern tip of what is now Illinois.

References

  1. "Illinois Fact Sheet", State of Illinois, March 2015
  2. Winkeler, Les, "IDNR hopes to re-open Fort Defiance by year's end", The Southern Illinoisan, 22 August 2014


Coordinates: 36°59′11″N 89°08′45″W / 36.9864411°N 89.1459038°W / 36.9864411; -89.1459038

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.