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Name:
Fort Shirley
Region:
Laurel Highlands/Southern Alleghenies
County:
Huntingdon
Marker Location:
US 522 (West side) near Aughwick Creek, Shirleysburg
Dedication Date:
May 29, 1926
Behind the Marker
Because of the colony's Quaker heritage, Pennsylvania had never established a militia nor appropriated money for fortifications. Prior to 1754, it did not need to, for the colony enjoyed the most peaceful Indian relations in British North America.
All that changed after Braddock's Defeat and Colonel Dunbar's abandonment of the Ohio Country. The colony desperately needed to protect its frontier from French and Indian attacks, so in 1755-56, it established four posts in Cumberland County.
Fort Shirley was the westernmost of these, built on the site of fur trader George Croghan's home and storehouse, near the Indian village of Aughwick (modern Shirleysburg). The few pro-British Ohio Indians that remained after the fall of Fort Necessity sought refuge there, and Croghan received a captain's commission in Pennsylvania's newly established militia. The post was named after Massachusetts's governor William Shirley, who briefly served as commander-in-chief of the British army in North America after Braddock's death.
The fall of another Pennsylvania post, Fort Granville, in July 1756 left Croghan's small garrison exposed, so the militia abandoned Fort Shirley and the colony concentrated its defenses in Carlisle. John Armstrong used Fort Shirley as an advance post for his raid on Kittanning in August 1756, a retaliatory strike against the Delawares who had taken Fort Granville.
All that changed after Braddock's Defeat and Colonel Dunbar's abandonment of the Ohio Country. The colony desperately needed to protect its frontier from French and Indian attacks, so in 1755-56, it established four posts in Cumberland County.
Fort Shirley was the westernmost of these, built on the site of fur trader George Croghan's home and storehouse, near the Indian village of Aughwick (modern Shirleysburg). The few pro-British Ohio Indians that remained after the fall of Fort Necessity sought refuge there, and Croghan received a captain's commission in Pennsylvania's newly established militia. The post was named after Massachusetts's governor William Shirley, who briefly served as commander-in-chief of the British army in North America after Braddock's death.
The fall of another Pennsylvania post, Fort Granville, in July 1756 left Croghan's small garrison exposed, so the militia abandoned Fort Shirley and the colony concentrated its defenses in Carlisle. John Armstrong used Fort Shirley as an advance post for his raid on Kittanning in August 1756, a retaliatory strike against the Delawares who had taken Fort Granville.