Fort Crafford
Foundation of the Crafford house
Fort Crafford is located in Virginia
Fort Crafford
Fort Crafford is located in the United States
Fort Crafford
LocationFort Eustis Military Reservation on Mulberry Island Point, Newport News, Virginia
Coordinates37°7′42″N 76°37′5″W / 37.12833°N 76.61806°W / 37.12833; -76.61806
Area9.5 acres (3.8 ha)
Built1861 (1861)
NRHP reference No.74002237[1]
VLR No.121-0027
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 17, 1974
Designated VLROctober 16, 1973[2]

Fort Crafford is a historic archaeological site located at Fort Eustis, Newport News, Virginia. It is a pentagonal-shaped earthwork located on Mulberry Island and built by Confederate forces in 1862. The earthworks on Mulberry Island are considered part of the Warwick Line. The purpose of these works was to prevent the Union from flanking the line on the James River. The fort formed the James River terminus of the second trans-peninsula defensive line, which included fortifications at Lee's Mill, as well as Dam No.1 and Wynne's Mill in Newport News Park.

Mulberry Point Battery, a water battery, guarded the Swash Channel along the James River. This battery was a complement to Fort Huger on the south side of the river.[3] In February 1862 a pentagonal earthwork enclosing approximately eight acres [4] was constructed inland from the Mulberry Point Battery to protect the battery from overland attack and to be a refuge for soldiers if the Minor Farm Line (a short rifle line constructed to defend the rear of the battery) was overrun. The fort was called the "covering work at Mulberry Island," or Mulberry Island Fort; later it became known as Fort Crafford after the owners of the land where it was built. This fort was not intended to be part of the main Warwick Line,[5] but was separated from it by about half a mile so that troops could withdraw from the line into the fort if necessary.[6] Confederate forces withdrew from Mulberry Island in May 1862 to move closer to Richmond, so Fort Crafford never saw combat.[7]

The foundation of the Crafford house located within the earthwork was excavated in the 1970s by amateur archaeologists of the Fort Eustis Historical and Archaeological Association. The brick and oyster-shell mortar foundation of the house remains, surrounded by a protective fence.[7]

In 1998 archaeologists from the Colonial Williamsburg Department of Archaeological Research conducted investigations into a seventeenth-century occupation of the area within the Civil War fortification. Three areas of seventeenth-century domestic activity were identified.[8]

Fort Crafford was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  3. Davis, Emma-Jo L. 1968 Mulberry Island and the Civil War. Fort Eustis Historical and Archaeological Association, Fort Eustis, VA p. 6
  4. Quarstein, John V. and J. Michael Moore 2012 Yorktown’s Civil War Siege: Drums Along the Warwick The History Press, Charleston, South Carolina p. 60
  5. Baxter, Carey L., Michael Hargrave, Jarrod Burks, and Susan Enscore 2009 An Archival and Archeological Evaluation of Earthworks at 44NN310, Fort Eustis, Virginia. Construction Engineering Research Laboratory, Champaign, IL. Submitted to Cultural Resource Office, Directorate of Public Works, Fort Eustis, VA pp. 53-54
  6. Davis, Emma-Jo L. 1968 Mulberry Island and the Civil War. Fort Eustis Historical and Archaeological Association, Fort Eustis, VA p. 22
  7. 1 2 Senior Airman Jason J. Brown (August 2012). "The anchor on the line: The history of Fort Crafford, Fort Eustis' Civil War relic". Joint Base Langley-Eustis. Archived from the original on 2013-11-11. Retrieved 2013-11-11.
  8. Gilmore, R. Grant III 1999 Phase II Archaeological Evaluation of Four Seventeenth-Century Sites (44NN34, 44NN70, 44NN153, 44NN201) at Fort Eustis, Virginia. The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, Department of Archaeological Research, Williamsburg, Virginia. pp. 25-29
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