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Fort Reno

Fort Reno, located off of present day Nebraska Avenue, NW, was originally
named Fort Pennsylvania, and was built during the winter of 1861 shortly
after the disastrous defeat of the Union Army at the First Battle of
Bull Run. In charge of construction of the defenses around Washington
was Brigadier General John G. Barnard, Colonel of Engineers, U.S. Army.
Barnard chose the location of Fort Reno for its strategic importance
in guarding the Rockville Pike (present day Wisconsin Avenue). Being
the highest elevation in the city (429 feet above sea level), Fort Reno
also served as a forward outpost and signal station for detecting enemy
movement near the northern part of the city.
Constructed by the 119th Pennsylvania Regiment, the fort's name
was later changed to Fort Reno in 1863 in memory of Major General
Jesse Lee Reno, who was mortally wounded at the Battle of South Mountain,
September 14, 1862.
Originally rather small, so Fort Reno was enlarged and strengthened
with an advanced battery 300 yards north from the highest ridge across
what is now Fessenden Street and along 39th Street. This advanced
battery had eight 12-pounder guns and a magazine; a covered walkway
connected it to the main fort to the south. A double line of rifle
trenches was added to strengthen the position.
Eventually the fort was the largest and strongest of those defending
the capital with a dozen heavy guns -- three Parrott siege guns and
nine 27-pounder barbette guns. A strength of three thousand men of
the First Brigade made Fort Reno the stronghold of the northern defenses
of the capital.
In July 1864, due to General Ulysses S. Grant's insistence that
troops be moved from the defenses to reinforce his army at Petersburg,
Fort Reno was under-manned, as were all of the defenses around the
city. Hearing from spies that the capital was poorly defended, Confederate
General Robert E. Lee sent General Jubal A. Early to attack the capital
from the north. Around noon Monday, July 11, 1864 (before the Battle
of Fort Stevens), Fort Reno was the first of the defenses to view
General Early's advance near Rockville, Maryland. The lookouts from
the signal tower at Fort Reno saw clouds of dust and then Confederate
army wagons moving toward the city.
During General Early's assault of Fort Stevens on July 11th and
12th, 1864, the heavy guns of Fort Reno lent little support value,
as there was a fear the long range guns would hit the Union Army's
advanced pickets. One of the shells that was fired from Fort Reno
by a 100-pounder Parrott Rifle traveled 3 1/2 miles south of the fort,
killing four Confederates where the present day Bethesda Naval Hospital
is located in Bethesda, Maryland. Because Fort Stevens was reinforced
on July 12, 1864, it was never taken by the Confederate Army, nor
was the capital city ever reached.
During the fighting of July 10-12, 1864, small squadrons of soldiers
from Forts Reno and Stevens had advanced into the countryside north
of the city to fend off the invaders. A few confederates were taken
prisoner and brought back to camps where they were held until transfer
to a central prison. Early's army retreated back across the Potomac
River near Leesburg, Virginia, and Washington breathed a sigh of relief.
After the close of the war, the forts (Reno included) were slowly
dismantled and abandoned. Most of Fort Reno could be seen as late
as 1892, but the fort and battery at the north end were eventually
graded down for the construction of a water reservoir. Today the site
is bounded by Nebraska Avenue, Fessenden Street, Belt Road, and Chesapeake
Street, NW.
http://www.nps.gov/rocr/ftcircle/reno.htm
last update: 8/3/01 DIW
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