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The Third System The Third System refers to 19th century military architecture in the United States. Fort Pulaski National Monument exists as one of the best preserved forts in this defense system. Shoreline defense was fragmented and weak when the British burned the nation's capital during the War of 1812. At the time coastal defenses were composed of a haphazard assortment of batteries and outposts. In response to lessons learned in the War of 1812, a new coastal defense system was designed. This new defense system was an attempt to protect critical United States shorelines. The Third System was established during a relatively peaceful time for the United States. These conditions provided for an unprecedented level of standardization in design and planning. For the first time, a professional board was appointed to oversee design and construction. Close to 200 forts were envisioned to guard the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, however only 30 were built. The structures were never completed in part because of events at Fort Pulaski during the Civil War. Fort ConstructionUpon graduation from West Point, Lt. Robert E. Lee, the future Confederate general, was in charge of designing the series of canals and earthworks that drained excess water from Cockspur Island, slightly east of Savannah, Georgia. This step was necessary to provide an adequate foundation for fort construction. During the American Civil War, Lee inspected the site and noticed the dike system had worked as planned. Land maps dated the year of the siege, 1862, show the area inside the dike as the only dry expanse of land.
The laborers included military servicemen, skilled masons, and carpenters (hired out from owners) all of whom battled the humid southern heat as well as mosquitoes. From 1829 to 1847, construction on the massive two story fort was intermittent. Conditions were so bad in the summer that work was sometimes halted for months. It is ironic that much of the labor was done by enslaved African Americans whose children may have enlisted in the Union Army at Fort Pulaski to fight for thier freedom. Many area slaves and free African Americans enlisted in the Union Army. During the Civil War, Major General David Hunter heavily recruited African Americans from the coastal area. His efforts coupled with the will of those who endured slavery resulted in the formation of the First South Carolina Volunteer Regiment in 1862. Later characterized as "Lincoln's Abolitionist General", Hunter freed area slaves by issuing General Order #7: "All persons of color lately held to involuntary service by enemies of the United States in Fort Pulaski and on Cockspur Island, Georgia, are hereby confiscated and declared free, in conformity with the law, and shall here after receive the fruits of their own labor." April, 1862 Major General David Hunter
The completed two tier structure is a truncated hexagon
that faces east. Included is a demilune, moat, two powder magazines, and a
parade ground about the size of a football field. Local brownish "Savannah
Gray" brick is found in the lower walls. The rose red brick is from Baltimore,
Maryland, and Alexandria, Virginia. The latter is harder than the "Savannah
Grays" so is used in the arches and embrasures. Visitors often mistake the red
brick for modern brick.
Date of Last Modification: 06/13/00
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