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When
Great Britain and the United States in 1859 agreed to a joint occupation
of San Juan Island until the water boundary between the two nations could
be settled, it was decided that camps would be located on opposite ends
of the island.
American Camp
really began on a grassy slope about 200 yards from the shoreline of Griffin
Bay. That’s where Captain George E. Pickett and Company D, 9th Infantry
landed on July 27, 1859. With the first tent stake, Pickett established
an American military presence on San Juan Island that lasted 14 years.

The Virginian changed locations after only three days, perhaps in a quest
for level ground but more likely because of the British naval guns looking
down his throat. It wasn’t until the August 10 arrival of reinforcements
under command of Lieutenant Colonel Silas Casey that the post found its
permanent home. Casey decided to move after two stormy nights at Pickett’s
second camp.
Casey was not impressed with the new site. "We are encamped in rather
exposed situation with regard to the wind, being at the entrance of the
Straits of Fuca. The weather at times is already quite inclement."
On August 22, Casey ordered his growing force (now 450 men) to pull up
stakes and relocate to the north slope of the ridge just north of the
Hudson’s Bay Company barns — once home to the pig that strayed and started
the whole mess two months before. Casey ordered large, conical Sibley
tents shipped from Fort Steilacoom to the new site which Casey deemed,
"a very good position for an entrenched camp."

The tents would supplement the clapboard buildings Pickett had already
shipped over from
Fort Bellingham, among these the hospital, barracks, laundress and officers
quarters. The veteran colonel also ordered Corps of Engineers Second Lieutenant
Henry Martyn Robert — late
r to achieve fame for his Rules of Order — to start work on a earthen
fortification on the ridgetop east of the new camp with a commanding view
of both strait and bay. Meanwhile, the British riding
at anchor in Griffin Bay were nothing short of impressed with the colonel’s
enterprise.
"(Casey’s
camp) is very strongly placed in the most commanding position at this
end of the island, well sheltered in the rear and one side by the Forest
and on the other side by a Commanding eminence," wrote Captain James Prevost,
commander of the H.M.S. Satellite.

As a deterrent, the post served its purpose until November when Lt. Gen.
Winfield Scott and British Columbia Gov. James Douglas finally agreed
to a peaceful joint occupation by a company from each nation until the
boundary dispute could be resolved. Casey and the bulk of the troops departed,
along with the artillery from the redoubt. One company remained.

And thus would the post continue through July 17, 1874. Eight companies
from four regiments — all regular army and under command of 15 different
officers — would man the post through some of the most tumultuous years
of American history. They endured isolation, bad food, worse quarters
and crushing boredom. Some soldiers were willing to risk company punishment
— such as carrying a 40-pound log around the post all day — to numb themselves
with the rotgut whisky of old San Juan Town. Some committed suicide. Some
took "French leave" (deserted). But most endured and by so doing contributed
to the legacy of peace we celebrate today.
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