Fort Snelling
Fort Snelling is a historic United States Army fortification and National Historic Landmark situated at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers in Minnesota, a location known as Bdote to the Dakota Sioux and significant in their creation stories.[1][2] Constructed between 1820 and 1825 under Colonel Josiah Snelling—initially named Fort St. Anthony—it was established to safeguard American fur trade interests, deter British advances from Canada, and enforce boundaries between Native American nations and settlers.[2][3] The fort's strategic position facilitated its evolution from a frontier outpost garrisoning 80 to 300 soldiers in the early 19th century to a major military hub, with minimal direct combat but involvement in diplomacy, such as the 1837 Treaty of St. Peters, and enforcement actions like evicting unauthorized settlers.[2] It gained notoriety through the residence of enslaved individuals Dred and Harriet Scott from 1836 to 1840, whose time there under the Missouri Compromise's free soil provisions underpinned their later unsuccessful Supreme Court suit for freedom in 1857, which denied citizenship to African Americans and invalidated federal restrictions on slavery.[4][5] During the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862—sparked by Dakota raids that killed hundreds of settlers—the fort served as an internment site for over 1,500 Dakota prisoners, many of whom faced execution or exile following military tribunals.[6][7] In the 20th century, it processed more than 300,000 military inductees during World War II before decommissioning in 1946.[8] Today, the site, reconstructed in the 1950s, is preserved by the Minnesota Historical Society to interpret its multifaceted military, Native American, and African American histories.[1][3]Geographical and Pre-Military Context
Strategic Location and Bdote Significance
Fort Snelling occupies a promontory at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers, approximately 10 miles south of present-day Minneapolis, Minnesota.[8] This site, known as Bdote to the Dakota people, provided a commanding overlook of the river junction, facilitating surveillance and control over waterborne traffic in the upper Midwest.[2] The U.S. military selected the location in 1805 under Lieutenant Zebulon Pike, who negotiated for the land via treaty with Dakota leaders, recognizing its potential to anchor American presence in the Northwest Territory amid post-War of 1812 tensions with British fur traders and indigenous groups.[6] The strategic value stemmed from the rivers' role as primary arteries for commerce and migration; the Mississippi offered access to the Gulf of Mexico, while the Minnesota connected to vast interior prairies and the Missouri River system.[9] Construction began in 1819 to counter British influence in the fur trade and deter cross-border incursions, establishing a forward base for patrolling the Canadian frontier and regulating trade routes that extended to the Rocky Mountains.[10] By the 1820s, the fort's position enabled enforcement of U.S. sovereignty over contested territories, including patrols against illegal buffalo hunting by French-Canadian operatives.[11] Bdote holds profound cultural significance for the Dakota as a sacred landscape and origin site, where the rivers' meeting symbolizes the convergence of creation narratives; oral traditions describe it as the place where the Dakota people emerged in human form, with seven original bands gathering there for ceremonies and sustenance.[2] Archaeological evidence confirms human occupation spanning over 10,000 years, underscoring its role as a longstanding hub for trade, diplomacy, and spiritual practices among Dakota communities.[12] The site's selection for fortification thus overlaid military objectives on a pre-existing indigenous center, altering access to resources like Pike Island's timber and fisheries that had sustained Dakota lifeways.[13]
Native American History Prior to European Contact
The confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers, known to the Dakota as Bdote ("where two waters come together"), held profound spiritual significance as a creation site in Dakota oral traditions prior to European contact. According to these traditions, spirits descended from Caŋku Wanaġi (the Milky Way) to Earth, where the Creator formed the Oceti Šakowiŋ (Seven Council Fires, encompassing the Dakota and allied peoples) from clay at Bdote, establishing a sacred link to the Wicahpi Oyate (Star Nation); the Mdewakantonwan band viewed it as the center of the Earth and a gateway to the spirit world.[14] Specific landmarks within Bdote, such as Taku Wakaŋ Tipi (a sacred cave) and Mni Owe Sni (a spring), served as focal points for rituals and storytelling central to Dakota cosmology.[14] Archaeological evidence corroborates millennia of indigenous human activity at the site, with artifacts indicating occupation dating back at least 9,000 to 12,000 years; a notable find includes a projectile point from approximately 6000 BCE, unearthed during 1970s excavations, suggesting tool-making and hunting by Archaic period peoples.[15] This aligns with broader regional patterns of pre-contact habitation by ancestors of Siouan-speaking groups, including early Woodland culture inhabitants who utilized the area's resources for sustenance and settlement.[15] The Mdewakanton Dakota, an eastern band of the Dakota (Isanti or Santee) people, maintained a deep connection to Bdote as part of their ancestral homeland in Mni Sota, employing seasonal mobility for hunting, farming maize and other crops, gathering wild rice, and fishing in the fertile riverine environment.[12] Bdote functioned as a hub for intertribal gatherings and spiritual practices, regarded in tradition as a place of origin akin to a "Garden of Eden," underscoring its role in sustaining Dakota cultural and ecological lifeways for generations before the arrival of Europeans in the 17th century.[16][12]Establishment and Early Military Role
Land Acquisition Through Treaties
The land comprising the site of Fort Snelling was initially acquired through negotiations conducted by U.S. Army Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike during his expedition up the Mississippi River. On September 23, 1805, at Bdote—the sacred confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota (then St. Peter's) Rivers—Pike met with seven Dakota Sioux leaders, securing a written agreement from two chiefs to cede a tract of land suitable for establishing a military fort and trading post, including adjacent Pike Island. This agreement, commonly known as the Pike Treaty, granted the United States the right to build and maintain the post while allowing the Dakota continued access for hunting and other traditional uses, with promised federal compensation that Pike estimated at $200 in his journal, though the treaty document left the amount blank.[10][17][18] Pike lacked formal authority to negotiate treaties, rendering the agreement unauthorized by the U.S. government, and the Senate never ratified it as a formal treaty due to concerns over its limited representation—only two of the seven present leaders signed—and potential coercion amid the Dakota's unfamiliarity with European-style land cessions. Despite these issues, the agreement provided the legal and practical basis for U.S. occupation of the site, with Congress later appropriating a nominal $200 in 1825 to honor the cession, far below any substantial valuation of the land. The military reservation was subsequently expanded through de facto control and later treaties, such as the 1837 Treaty of St. Peters negotiated at the fort itself, which involved broader Dakota and Ojibwe land cessions in the region but did not directly address the original fort site already under U.S. use.[2][19][20]Construction and Activation (1819-1825)
In August 1819, Lieutenant Colonel Henry Leavenworth arrived at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers with detachments from the 6th U.S. Infantry Regiment to establish a military outpost, initially constructing temporary structures as a cantonment.[11] This site, selected earlier by Zebulon Pike in 1805 and recommended by Major Stephen Long in 1817, aimed to secure U.S. interests in the Upper Mississippi fur trade and deter potential British incursions from Canada following the War of 1812.[21] In 1820, Colonel Josiah Snelling assumed command, bringing elements of the 5th U.S. Infantry Regiment to relieve Leavenworth's forces, and initiated permanent fort construction on September 10 by laying the cornerstone for what was then named Fort St. Anthony.[10] Construction involved quarrying Platteville limestone from nearby river bluffs, with soldiers performing much of the manual labor alongside hired civilians and enslaved individuals owned by officers.[21] The project encompassed barracks, officers' quarters, a round tower, and other structures designed for frontier defense, reflecting standard U.S. Army engineering practices of the era. By 1825, the fort's core facilities were completed, marking its activation as a fully operational military post.[21] The U.S. War Department renamed it Fort Snelling that year in honor of Colonel Snelling's supervisory role, shifting from the prior designation after St. Anthony Falls.[10] Upon activation, the garrison focused on patrolling trade routes, maintaining order among fur traders and Native American tribes, and asserting American sovereignty in the region.Operations as a Frontier Outpost
Upon completion of construction in 1825, Fort Snelling served primarily as a garrison for the U.S. Army's 5th Infantry Regiment and other rotating units, maintaining a force of 80 to 300 soldiers including infantry, cavalry, and artillery detachments.[2] These troops conducted routine patrols along the upper Mississippi River and into Dakota and Ojibwe territories to enforce federal restrictions on unauthorized settlement and trade, thereby safeguarding American dominance in the fur trade against British and Canadian competitors.[10] [11] The fort's strategic position at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers enabled it to regulate commerce, with soldiers escorting licensed traders from the American Fur Company—headquartered nearby at Mendota—and interdicting illicit operations, such as illegal buffalo hunts by French-Canadian poachers along the northern border during the 1830s and 1840s.[2] [11] Military operations emphasized deterrence over combat, as no battles occurred at the post itself; instead, detachments mediated intertribal disputes between Dakota and Ojibwe groups to prevent disruptions to fur production and revenue flows to the U.S. government.[10] The adjacent St. Peters Indian Agency, established in 1820 and led by agent Lawrence Taliaferro until 1840, coordinated these efforts, using the fort as a base for diplomatic negotiations that culminated in events like the 1837 Treaty of St. Peters, which ceded lands from the tribes.[2] Troops also evicted illegal squatters from reserved Native lands in 1840 and supported the forced relocation of Ho-Chunk people to Iowa in 1848, enforcing treaty obligations amid growing settler pressures.[2] Beyond policing, Fort Snelling functioned as a launch point for exploratory and surveying missions, including French scientist Joseph Nicollet's 1836 expeditions mapping the headwaters of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, which relied on army provisions and escorts for safety in contested territories.[2] These activities underscored the post's role in facilitating U.S. territorial claims, though the small garrison size limited aggressive projections of power against larger Native populations, prioritizing stability for economic expansion until Minnesota's statehood rendered the outpost obsolete in 1858.[10]Key Controversies and Social Dynamics
Practice of Slavery Despite Territorial Laws
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 explicitly prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory, encompassing the region where Fort Snelling was later constructed, while the Missouri Compromise of 1820 further banned it north of the 36°30' parallel, including the fort's location.[22][23] Despite these federal restrictions, U.S. Army officers stationed at the fort from its activation in 1820 routinely transported enslaved African Americans from Southern states to serve as personal domestics, laborers, and attendants, flouting territorial prohibitions through de facto military tolerance.[24] This practice persisted under the Minnesota Territory's organic act of 1849, which reaffirmed the slavery ban, and even briefly after Minnesota's 1858 statehood constitution explicitly outlawed it.[23] Army regulations subsidized the arrangement by allocating officers extra pay, rations, and clothing allowances for "servants," with records indicating that approximately 13 percent of officers' total pay expenditures from 1815 to 1861 directly supported enslaved labor across frontier forts, including Fort Snelling.[24] National Archives pay vouchers document thousands of such enslaved individuals army-wide, with estimates of 15 to 30 or more at Fort Snelling during the 1820s and 1830s, peaking above 30 in 1828 under the First Infantry Regiment's garrison.[24][23] Enslaved people performed household tasks, construction support, and personal services, often under officers from slaveholding backgrounds like Colonel Josiah Snelling, who owned multiple individuals, and Indian Agent Lawrence Taliaferro, the fort's largest local slaveholder, who imported them from Virginia for use and trade.[22] The absence of enforcement stemmed from federal military priorities, Southern officers' influence, and the transient nature of postings, allowing violations without immediate repercussions despite occasional resistance via freedom suits.[23] For instance, Lieutenant Thomas Stockton held Rachel in bondage from 1830 to 1834 until her successful 1836 Missouri Supreme Court petition for freedom, citing territorial residence, yet such cases did not halt the broader practice.[22] Similarly, trader Alexis Bailly owned Courtney until 1835, with freedom following legal precedents, but enslaved numbers rebounded to nine by 1855–1857.[23] Slavery at the fort ended not through legal compulsion but via the 10th Infantry Regiment's relocation in the late 1850s, the last unit documented employing enslaved labor there.[23]Legal Precedents and Dred Scott Case
Slavery persisted at Fort Snelling despite the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 prohibiting it in the Northwest Territory and the Missouri Compromise of 1820 extending that ban north of latitude 36°30' in the Louisiana Purchase territories, including the area of present-day Minnesota.[5] U.S. Army officers routinely brought enslaved individuals to the post for personal service, with the military tacitly permitting the practice under its jurisdiction, though no formal legal exemption existed.[25] In 1836, a Missouri state court ruling affirmed that military officers were not exempt from territorial anti-slavery laws, yet enforcement remained lax at frontier outposts like Fort Snelling.[26] Dred Scott, an enslaved man owned by Army surgeon Dr. John Emerson, arrived at Fort Snelling in 1835 after prior residence in free Illinois.[27] There, on April 6, 1836, Scott married Harriet Robinson, another enslaved person owned by an Army officer, with Emerson's consent; their daughter Eliza was born soon after.[28] The family resided at the fort until 1838, when Emerson relocated to Missouri, a slave state, taking the Scotts with him.[29] After Emerson's death in 1843, Scott sought to purchase his family's freedom from Emerson's widow but was refused, prompting a freedom suit filed in St. Louis Circuit Court on April 6, 1846.[27] Scott's legal argument centered on his four-year residence at Fort Snelling in free territory, claiming it emancipated him and his family under the principle that voluntary sojourn in a free jurisdiction conferred permanent freedom upon return to a slave state—a doctrine Missouri courts had previously applied to Illinois residence but contested for territories.[30] The initial trial jury ruled in Scott's favor in 1848, but a new trial ordered in 1850 ended in mistrial; the case dragged until 1852, when the Missouri Supreme Court reversed, holding that Scott remained enslaved, rejecting the territorial residence as sufficient for freedom.[27] The case reached the U.S. Supreme Court as Dred Scott v. Sandford in 1856, with oral arguments emphasizing the Fort Snelling period.[5] On March 6, 1857, in a 7-2 decision authored by Chief Justice Roger Taney, the Court ruled Scott had no standing to sue as a non-citizen, declared African Americans ineligible for citizenship, and invalidated the Missouri Compromise as exceeding congressional authority over territories.[30] Taney avoided directly adjudicating the freedom-by-residence claim but effectively nullified anti-slavery territorial restrictions, intensifying sectional tensions leading to the Civil War.[5] The decision's territorial slavery holding implicitly undermined precedents like Scott's Fort Snelling argument, affirming owner rights over enslaved persons regardless of temporary free-soil exposure.[28]Military Engagements and Operations
Civil War Mobilization and Training
Following the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, Minnesota Governor Alexander Ramsey offered 1,000 troops to President Abraham Lincoln, making Minnesota the first state to respond with volunteers for the Union Army.[31] These recruits assembled at Fort Snelling, which reopened as a primary rendezvous point for mustering and initial organization.[32] By mid-May 1861, ten companies—approximately 1,000 men—had begun gathering there, undergoing basic enlistment processing before formal training commenced.[31] Training at Fort Snelling emphasized foundational military discipline, with recruits spending most of their time on marching drills, weapons handling, and guard duty to instill unit cohesion and combat readiness.[32] Over the course of the war from 1861 to 1865, nearly 25,000 soldiers passed through the fort for induction and training, including key Minnesota units such as the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, mustered on April 29, 1861, and subsequent regiments like the Second, Third, and Eleventh Minnesota Volunteer Infantry.[32][33] The fort also facilitated the organization of mounted units like Brackett's Battalion, which mustered out in May 1866 as one of the last.[33] To handle increased enlistments following the 1863 federal draft, the facility expanded with large wooden barracks constructed outside the original stone walls, supplemented by tents for overflow.[32] Fort Snelling served not only as a training hub but also as a mustering-out site for returning units, supporting Minnesota's overall contribution of over 24,000 troops to the Union effort, many of whom saw action in major campaigns like Gettysburg.[33][32]Dakota War of 1862: Context and U.S. Response
The Dakota War of 1862 stemmed from U.S. government failures to honor treaties signed in 1851 and 1858, which ceded vast Dakota lands in Minnesota in exchange for reservations, annuities, and food provisions. Delays in annuity payments—diverted amid the Civil War—and corruption among Indian agents left the Dakota facing starvation during the summer of 1862, as traditional food sources like wild game diminished due to settler encroachment and overhunting.[34] [35] Internal Dakota divisions exacerbated tensions, with younger warriors and leaders like Little Crow advocating resistance against elders favoring accommodation with U.S. authorities; these pressures ignited on August 17, 1862, when four young Dakota killed five settlers near Acton, triggering widespread attacks on settlements along the Minnesota River Valley over the next six weeks, resulting in approximately 450-800 settler deaths and the flight of thousands more.[7] [36] In response, Minnesota Governor Alexander Ramsey mobilized state militias and appointed Henry Sibley, former territorial governor, to command an expeditionary force of about 1,500 soldiers, which advanced from Fort Snelling to confront Dakota bands.[37] U.S. forces secured victories at battles like Wood Lake on September 23, 1862, leading to the surrender of around 2,000 Dakota, including combatants and non-combatants, at Camp Release by late September; this suppressed the uprising but prompted rapid military trials for 498 prisoners, with 303 initially sentenced to death by commissions under Sibley's authority for participation in hostilities or atrocities.[7] [36] President Abraham Lincoln reviewed the trial records amid public demands for reprisals, commuting 264 sentences and approving 39 executions for those convicted of specific murders or rapes, though one was later reprieved; on December 26, 1862, 38 Dakota men were hanged in Mankato, marking the largest mass execution in U.S. history.[38] [39] [40] As part of the suppression and containment efforts, Fort Snelling served as the primary internment site for non-combatants: approximately 1,658 Dakota women, children, and elders were force-marched 100 miles southward, arriving on November 13, 1862, to a makeshift camp on the Minnesota River bluff below the fort, guarded by U.S. troops.[7] [41] Internment conditions at Fort Snelling were harsh, with overcrowding, inadequate shelter, and exposure to winter cold contributing to outbreaks of measles, pneumonia, and other diseases; sanitation was rudimentary, and food supplies were limited, leading to an estimated 102 to 300 deaths over the winter of 1862-1863.[41] [36] In spring 1863, survivors—totaling around 1,300—were briefly moved to nearby Pike Island before relocation to Crow Creek Reservation in Dakota Territory under congressional order, effectively exiling the Dakota from Minnesota and dissolving their treaty rights.[7] The fort's role underscored its function as a hub for frontier military logistics and prisoner holding during the crisis, though the internment's mortality reflected broader logistical failures in managing large-scale captivity without adequate medical or infrastructural support.[41]Post-Civil War Indian Campaigns
Following the American Civil War, Fort Snelling reestablished itself as a central hub for U.S. Army operations in the northern plains, serving as the headquarters for the Department of Dakota, which administered military activities from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains.[42] This department played a pivotal role in coordinating responses to conflicts with Native American tribes during the broader Indian Wars, including logistical planning and troop mobilization for campaigns against resistant groups such as the Lakota Sioux.[42][43] The fort acted primarily as a supply depot and staging area for expeditions westward, facilitating the transport of provisions, ammunition, and personnel to remote outposts and active fronts in the Dakotas and Montana Territory.[44] During the 1870s and 1880s, it supported operations aimed at securing transportation routes, protecting settlers, and subduing tribal resistance to U.S. expansion, such as those following the Black Hills Gold Rush that escalated tensions with the Sioux.[44] Regular Army units departing from or rotating through Fort Snelling contributed to field engagements, though the post's contributions emphasized administrative oversight rather than direct combat launches.[43] Notable among stationed forces was the Twenty-Fifth United States Infantry Regiment, an African American unit designated as Buffalo Soldiers, which garrisoned the fort from 1882 to 1888, including companies and the regimental band.[44] These soldiers, while based at Fort Snelling, supported Department of Dakota missions, including patrols and reinforcements for western garrisons like Fort Hale and Fort Meade amid ongoing skirmishes.[44] The fort's infrastructure expansions during this era, such as additional barracks and storage facilities, underscored its sustained logistical importance until the decline of major hostilities in the late 1880s.[42]World War I Contributions
During World War I, Fort Snelling hosted two Officers' Training Camps in 1917 to rapidly expand the U.S. Army's officer corps amid mobilization following the American entry into the war on April 6, 1917. The first camp ran from May 11 to August 15, while the second operated from August 28 to November 27, attracting approximately 6,000 applicants from Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and National Guard units, with 4,000 accepted—exclusively white candidates, as African Americans were directed to separate facilities in Iowa. Training emphasized infantry, artillery, and engineer tactics, evolving to include trench warfare techniques such as grenade throwing and bayonet drills to prepare for European theater conditions. These camps produced over 2,500 commissioned officers: 1,551 from the first session on August 13, 1917, and 971 from the second by November 27, 1917, with some assigned early to the Signal Corps. [21] The graduates contributed to the Army's growth from roughly 200,000 to over 4 million personnel, filling leadership roles in newly formed divisions deployed to France. Fort Snelling also served as an initial processing and training hub for thousands of Midwestern recruits, including most of the 118,500 Minnesotans who entered military service, handling enlistments, basic orientation, and mustering before transfer to larger cantonments.[11] Slightly over 100 African Americans volunteered at the fort during the war, though systemic segregation limited their integration into training programs.[11] In September 1918, following the cessation of officer training, Fort Snelling was redesignated as General Hospital No. 29 under the Army Medical Department, expanding to 1,200 beds to treat wounded returnees, influenza epidemic victims, and soldiers requiring reconstructive surgery or prosthetic limbs.[44] [45] The facility operated from September 21, 1918, to August 8, 1919, providing specialized care amid the Spanish flu outbreak and postwar demobilization, closing shortly after the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919.[21] [45] This medical role supported the broader effort to rehabilitate combatants, with the Upper Post's infrastructure adapted for hospital use until facilities were decommissioned.[44]World War II as Induction Center
Following the U.S. entry into World War II in December 1941, Fort Snelling's Upper Post served as a primary induction and reception center from September 1941 to 1945, processing draftees and volunteers primarily from Minnesota and adjacent states.[46][47] The facility inducted over 300,000 men and women into military service, with many assigned to the Army Air Corps.[46][47] Initially equipped with 38 buildings in the cantonment area, the site handled about 250 recruits per day; by the end of 1942, expansions added over 260 structures across 1,500 acres, enabling peak processing of up to 800 inductees daily supported by a staff of 700.[46][47] Inductees underwent swearing-in ceremonies, medical examinations, vaccinations, classification testing, unit assignments, and issuance of basic equipment during short stays before transfer to basic training locations.[47] The infrastructure included offices, warehouses, rail yards, barracks, parade grounds, and recreational amenities like swimming pools, a golf course, a movie theater, and Red Cross-operated libraries to accommodate personnel.[46][47] Beyond induction, the post housed units such as military police battalions and the headquarters of the Military Railway Service, though its core function remained rapid mobilization of new service members.[46] This role underscored Fort Snelling's strategic importance in the Midwest for wartime manpower processing until operations wound down in September 1945.[47]