Category:Fort Ridgely
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Fort Ridgely (1853-1867) - Established in 1851 by 6th U.S. Infantry troops to watch over the Dakota Indian reservation and keep the peace between settlers and the Dakota Indians. The fort was manned during the civil by volunteer units of the 5th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Fort Ridgely played an important role in the 1862 Dakota War. Two battles were fought there on 20 August-22, 1862 between Army volunteers and refugees from the Minnesota River Valley, and Dakota forces. This was one of the few instances of a full assault on a U.S. Military post in the west.
The Army abandoned the Fort in 1867 leaving one soldier behind as a caretaker. The caretaker left the post in 1872 and civilians occupied the remaining buildings and dismantled the structures for their own use. Today the building foundations are preserved by a private group and owned by the Minnesota Historical Society (MHS) within the boundaries of Fort Ridgely State Park (DNR). The old commissary building (partially reconstructed by the Veteran Conservation Corps in the 1930s) now houses the museum.
Location: Near the Dakota reservation in South-Western Minnesota (located near New Ulm) Maps & Images
Lat: 47.6570 Long: -122.4182
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