Beaufort History: The marvel of Fort Fremont

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photo courtesy Phil Heim

A few miles down Lands End Road on St. Helena Island lies one of the most peculiar looking structures you’ll ever see in such an out of the way place.

Tucked along the water in the lush maritime forest, is Fort Fremont. A Spanish-American War fort that was manned during the war but had never fired a single shot.

In 1885, President Garfield, through his Secretary of War William Crowninshield Endicott, established a Board of Fortifications to review the status of all coastal defense fortifications. The Board reported that the improved weapons technology of high velocity breech-loaded cannons rendered the existing coastal defense systems obsolete. The Endicott Board recommendations led to a large scale modernization program for harbor and coastal defense in the United States.

When the war with Spain loomed in 1898, construction of coastal batteries was authorized by Congress under the $50 million Harbor Fortification Defense Act. The historic significance of Fort Fremont is that it is representative of the new coastal defenses built during this period with its upgraded design, and new weapons systems.

U.S. Naval Station Port Royal

Port Royal Sound is one of the largest natural deep water harbors on the Atlantic Coast. During the Civil War, after contributing to the sack of Beaufort, the Union Army’s South Atlantic Blockading Squadron established a base here for fleet repairs and a coaling station.

In 1891-1895 a dry dock was built at the Naval Station; the only one south of Norfolk, Virginia. It served as a strategic support base for the emerging Atlantic Fleet. Twenty-two naval ships visited the Station including the Battleships USS Maine, USS Massachusetts, USS Texas, and USS Indiana. The USS Maine made its last stop for provisions in Port Royal before leaving for its last voyage to Havana, Cuba, and the start of the Spanish American War.

Fort Fremont was built in 1899 by the Army Corps of Engineers using local labor on condemned private property on Saint Helena Island across the Beaufort River from the Naval Station. It was designed to play a vital role in the protection of the strategic dry dock and coaling station which remained critical to the Atlantic Fleet during the Spanish American War period.

The Fremont Batteries

Fort Fremont was one of six fortifications designed to protect the southeastern coast during the Spanish American War. The fort site eventually consisted of 170 acres with numerous outbuildings, including an administration building, guard house, barracks, hospital, stable, mess hall, bakery, commissary, post exchange, lavatory, and water tower. It was manned by a force of up to 110 personnel.

The main weapon systems consisted of Battery Jesup, which included three 10-inch breech-loaded disappearing cannons, and Battery Fornance which had two 4.7-inch rapid fire guns. These five gun emplacements, built behind bastions of earth, logs and concrete became some of the highest ground on the coastal islands.

Coastal defense during the Fort Fremont era was the responsibility of the artillery branch of the United Stated Army, and in 1901, the fort was manned by the E/2nd Artillery. In 1907, Fort Fremont was turned over to the 16th Company of the newly created Coast Artillery Corps which had its own uniforms, insignia, and traditions.

The Land’s End Light

In June 1910, violence erupted between artillerymen at the fort and African-American civilians involving the sale of moonshine by the locals. Following several fights, six soldiers were wounded and one killed. Isaiah Potter, arrested for the fatal shooting, claimed that the trouble began with what the Beaufort Gazette called “intimacy between his wife and a private soldier” who was identified as Pvt. Frank J. Quigley. A local legend identifies Quigley as the ghostly Land’s End Light.

Deactivation and Privitization

As early as 1906, the War Department gave serious consideration to the closing of Fort Fremont, due to budgetary constraints. In 1908, the general public could tour the fort and its weapon emplacements. In 1911, only a small detachment of soldiers of the 116th Company Coastal Artillery from Fort Screven, GA, remained at the post following transfer the 127th Company to Fort Sam Houston (Galveston, TX). The guns at Fort Fremont stayed on the fort until World War I.

Fort Fremont was officially deactivated in 1912 and the land was put on the market in 1921.

Several private individuals acquired the property on Saint Helena Island over the years with various plans which by 1946 resulted in platting the property into beach lots. In 1951, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Schurmeir renovated the hospital structure into a hunting and fishing lodge. In 1972, the concrete gun emplacements were the property of Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Dowling.

In May of 1989, the batteries and the hospital building (still a private residence) were both listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

THE FUTURE of FORT FREMONT

Over time, the land grew over with maritime forest and the ruins of the fort became an attractive nuisance. In October 2004, The Trust for Public Land and the Beaufort County Council paid $5.4 million to two landowners in order to transform the remnants of Fort Fremont into a beachfront park.

Completed in 2021, project improvements at the site included the construction of an interpretive history center to provide an educational experience for visitors to the facility, which will also house many artifacts and display items representing the Fort’s history. The scope of work also included the installation of a picnic pavilion along with walking paths and public restrooms, making a fantastic scenic sea island spot even better.

See PHOTOS of Fort Fremont
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