During
the 1840s, the Quartermaster Department was responsible for the construction,
maintenance, and supply of all the army forts and military roads. The
Quartermaster's Storehouse at Fort Scott was constructed from 1842-43.
Fort Scott's most important Quartermaster was Captain Thomas Swords-who
designed and supervised the construction of the fort. Captain Swords
was assisted in the operation of his department by a sergeant, a forage
master, and one or two clerks.
The storehouse contains six rooms and could be considered as a 19th
Century Hardware and Grocery Warehouse. Each company of soldiers was
issued a specified amount of public property and each soldier was responsible
for his uniform, weapons, and equipment. If a soldier lost, damaged,
or destroyed a piece of public property, he was required to pay for
a replacement. In fact, the cost of the replacement was deducted from
his pay, before he was paid.
Part
of the storehouse served as the Commissary or Military Grocery Warehouse
of the 19th Century. The army shipped everything in boxes, crates, sacks,
kegs, and barrels to prevent things from being stolen or damaged. The
subsistence officer was responsible for ordering, inspecting, and issuing
all of the food such as salt pork, salt beef, beans, coffee, flour,
rice, salt, and sugar. The army purchased large amounts of food from
civilian contractors and the Subsistence Officer had to inspect each
shipment to make sure that it was acceptable. The contractors often
tried to cheat the army by delivering bad flour, green barrels, and
soft candles.
The quartermaster storehouse is the only fort building which has a
basement where the cool temperature prevented perishable items such
as vegetables, molasses, vinegar, whiskey, candles, and soap from spoiling
from the heat. Tools, supplies, and subsistence items not available
on the frontier were purchased back east by the army and shipped to
Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, near St. Louis. From there the supplies
were shipped on steamboats up the Missouri River to Fort Leavenworth
and then in wagons down the military road to Fort Scott.
The storehouse was part of a complex of buildings known as the Quartermaster
Quadrangle. This area included corncribs, stables for the mules, horses,
and oxen that pulled the supply wagons, a blacksmith shop, and carpenter
shops. Only two other quartermaster buildings exist today, a small stone
building, which was probably a blacksmith shop, and the bake house.
The information for this section came from an anonymous
article written by park staff at Fort Scott National Historic Site.
