CCD
HISTORY 201 - History of United States 1
Fort Duquesne
at the junction of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, on the site of
Pittsburgh, SW Pa. Because of its strategic location, it was a major objective
in the last of the French
and Indian Wars. The fort was begun by a group of Virginians in 1754 at the
insistence of Gov. Robert Dinwiddie. The French drove the Virginians away on
Apr. 17, 1754, and completed the fort; they named it after the Marquis de
Duquesne, governor-general of New France. George Washington’s Virginia militia
had failed to reach the fort before the arrival of the French (see Fort Necessity). Fort
Duquesne was also the goal of an unsuccessful expedition under English Gen.
Edward Braddock in 1755. On Nov. 24, 1758, the French abandoned their position
without a fight to advancing British troops led by Gen. John Forbes and
retreated north after burning Fort Duquesne. The English rebuilt it and renamed
it Fort Pitt, around which Pittsburgh grew.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002
Columbia University Press