'Fort Duncan' was a
U.S. Army post, set up to protect the first U.S. settlement on the
Rio Grande near the current town of
Eagle Pass, Texas.
Fort Duncan was established on
March 27,
1849, when
Captain Sidney Burbank occupied the site with companies A, B, and F of the First
United States Infantry. On
November 14,
1849, the post was named Fort Duncan, after
James Duncan, a hero of the
Mexican-American War. The post consisted of a storehouse, two magazines, four officers' quarters, and a stone hospital, in addition to quarters for enlisted men. Construction was done half by the troops and half by hired workers. There was ample stone but no timber for building, and the men suffered from exposure. Company C, First Artillery, asked permission to construct quarters at its own expense. During the 1850s, Fort Duncan provided merchants and traders protection from border frontier outlaws and
Native Americans. The fort also served as a post for scouting Native Americans.
Fort Duncan became involved in the
Callahan expedition of 1855, when
James H. Callahan led an effort to repel attacks of
Lipan Apaches and to capture runaway
slaves. Callahan seized and set
Piedras Negras on fire, and the commanders at the fort ultimately refused to help him recross the Rio Grande into the United States. Secretary of War
John B. Floyd ordered the post abandoned in May 1859.
Robert E. Lee ordered the fort regarrisoned in March 1860. With the outbreak of the
American Civil War the post was again abandoned when the Federal troops evacuated on
March 20,
1861. It was also an important customs point for
Confederate cotton and munitions trade with
Mexico.
Federal troops reoccupied Fort Duncan on
March 23,
1868. During the 1870s, the
Seminole Indians became members of the command and were used as guides in the area. The post was abandoned in once again in 1883. From 1890 to 1916, when disturbances in Mexico took national guard units to the river, the fort had a skeleton caretaking detachment. Troop activity continued throughout
World War I, when the fort served as a training facility, but by 1920 only a small detail remained.
In 1933, the City of Eagle Pass began maintaining the old fort as a public park. The city formally acquired the property in 1935 and converted it into
Fort Duncan Park. In 1942 the mayor offered the fort to the military for use during
World War II. The government used the
Fort Duncan Country Club as an officers' club and the swimming pool for commissioned personnel stationed at
Eagle Pass Army Air Field. The site was listed in the
National Register of Historic Places in 1971. Seven of the original buildings still stand today. In the early 1980s, the Fort Duncan Country Club caught fire and only the outer walls remain. The Commander's Headquarters building has been converted into the
Fort Duncan Museum.
External links
★ http://www.cityofeaglepass.com/history/fortduncan.htm
★ http://www.cityofeaglepass.com/museum/home.htm