FORT FREDERICA HISTORIC
PLAQUE
Located at the rear of the Visitor's Center,
Fort Frederica National Monument, St. Simons Island, Ga.
(text)
FORT FREDERICA
In 1736, on this historic
site, Fort Frederica was constructed by the early settlers of
the Colony of Georgia under General James Edward Oglethorpe.
It was the strongest fortification built by Great Britain on
American soil and its purpose was to protect Georgia and the
colonies to the north from the Spaniards who were already established
in Florida.
In 1742, six years later,
more than 3,000 Spanish troops landed in 52 vessels at Gascoigne
Bluff on St. Simons island. The British forces advanced to meet
them and decisively defeated the Spaniards in the Battle of Bloody
Marsh. Thus Fort Frederica fulfilled the purpose for which it
was built and Georgia remained a British colony. In 1903 after
more than a century and a half of disuse and decay the small
remaining ruins were conveyed to Mrs. Belle Stevens Taylor to
Mrs. Georgia Pace King Wilder as president of the Georgia Society
of Colonial Dames of America, who sought to preserve and restore
Fort Frederica. In this patriotic undertaking they were assisted
by generous citizens of Georgia and other states who formed the
Fort Frederica Association and rendered aid in money, property,
and services to make this land available for restoration. In
1945 their efforts were rewarded when the United States Government
established Fort Frederica National Monument.
THIS TABLET
PRESENTED
BY FORT FREDERICA
ASSOCIATION
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