Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Fort Screven Tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

fort screven tybee

In 1786, the Georgia Legislature approved the creation of a fort on Cockspur or Tybee Island to be named in honor of General James Screven, a Revolutionary War hero. The fort was never built by the state, but in 1808, the property fell under the jurisdiction of the Federal government as Fort Screven Reservation.
In 1855, the government approved building Fort Screven on the north end of Tybee to provide modern seacoast defense. Six poured-concrete, low-profile gun batteries (named for war heroes) and a minefield were ordered for Tybee along with hundreds of other military buildings. From 1897 to 1947, the fort was an integral part of America’s Coastal Defense system. Troops stood guard on Tybee through the Spanish American War of 1898, World War I and World War II. In 1947, the Fort was closed and sold to the Town of Tybee and tourism returned as a major part of Tybee’s history. By the 1950s many of the forts buildings had been converted for use by private owners.
In 1961, Battery Garland, the former gun battery and magazine for a 12 inch long-range gun, became the Tybee Island museum. A room that once stored six hundred pound projectiles and two hundred pound bags of gun powder, now hold the collections and exhibits of more than four hundred years of Tybee Island history.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More