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Fort
Duchesne was established by Major Frederick William Benteen
on 20 August 1886, on a site selected by General George
Crook, and General Crook soon took command of the new
fort. Construction began in October 1886 and the reservation
was officially designated by President Cleveland in September
1887. The fort continued to serve, with an average detachment
of 250 men, until its closure in September 1912. Remnants
of the fort still exist.
Fort
Duchesne was established to replace Fort Thornburgh in
the Uinta Basin, which had been abandoned by the U.S.
Army during the winter of 1884-85. An outbreak of inter-band
warfare among the Utes during the winter of 1885-86 once
more raised the question of placing a fort in the basin.
The Department of the Interior and the War Department
each sent investigators to the area who recommended the
establishment of a permanent fort. Crook selected the
site in August 1886; it was three miles above the junction
of the Uintah and Duchesne rivers and midway between the
Whiterocks agency and Ouray agency headquarters.
Major
Benteen led two troops of the Ninth Cavalry from Fort
McKinney, Wyoming, and a Captain Duncan led four companies
of infantry from Fort Steele, Wyoming, onto the Ute Reservation
to establish the fort. The cavalry troops Benteen led
into the Uinta Basin were a detachment of the Ninth, which
was a Black cavalry unit that served on the Uintah frontier
for twelve years. With the outbreak of the Spanish-American
War, the Ninth was sent to Cuba in 1898. The soldiers
of the Ninth were highly decorated during that war, and
were among the men who followed Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
up San Juan Hill.
While
Benteen's men reached the fort site without incident,
Duncan's infantry barely escaped disaster. As Duncan's
men prepared to take a shortcut, a Ute policeman rode
up on a well lathered horse and informed Duncan that nearly
three hundred Utes lay in ambush for his men. Duncan decided
to march via the longer, regularly traveled road, and
arrived at the fort site without incident.
When
the combined forces arrived at the fort site, they were
confronted by a force of 700 Utes. The soldiers quickly
threw up a picket line and began to dig defensive trenches.
These proved to be unnecessary when the Utes became convinced
that the army would not attack them as long as they remained
passive. By October, the soldiers had settled into the
routine and business of the camp and its construction.
President
Grover Cleveland officially designated the six square
miles that comprised the fort reservation on 1 September
1887. During the summer of 1887, the troops spent approximately
$22,800 on construction of the fort. This included the
construction of officers' and enlisted men's quarters,
a commissary, a storehouse, and a hospital, all of adobe
brick. Establishment of Fort Duchesne caused the War Department
to again evaluate the need for the string of small western
forts. Fort Steele was abandoned in 1886 when the troops
left for Uintah County, and Fort Bridger was abandoned
in 1890. Fort Duchesne was designated to guard the Indian
frontier in eastern Utah, western Colorado, and southwestern
Wyoming.
Fort
Duchesne declined in use from 1890 to 1910. In 1893 the
four infantry companies were removed to Fort Douglas.
By 1909 there was only one company of cavalry left. In
1910 the inspecting officer of the U.S. Army "found no
military reason why Fort Duchesne, Utah should be continued
as a military post." On 13 September 1912 Troop M of the
First Cavalry, the last remaining unit at the reservation,
left Fort Duchesne for Fort Boise, Idaho. The Indian Service
consolidated its Uintah and Ouray operations at Fort Duchesne
after the fort's abandonment by the army. The buildings
that had been constructed to control the Indians were
at last used to assist them.
David
L. Schirer
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