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Fort Dayton

Coordinates: 43°01′45″N 74°59′24″W / 43.02917°N 74.99000°W / 43.02917; -74.99000
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43°01′45″N 74°59′24″W / 43.02917°N 74.99000°W / 43.02917; -74.99000

Fort Dayton is located on the North side of the Mohawk River at West Canada Creek in what is now Herkimer, New York. A fort had previously been built on the same site during the French and Indian War.

American Revolutionary War

When the American Revolutionary War started, the fort was described as "little better than a dilapidated block-house". It was rebuilt under the supervision of Colonel Elias Dayton on the orders of General Philip Schuyler in the autumn of 1776. It was a wooden and earthen fortress which enclosed the church and other buildings located on the highest ground in the village, once known as "Stone Ridge". There also was a blockhouse constructed on the hill overlooking Fort Dayton.

On August 4, 1777, General Nicholas Herkimer assembled about 900 troops of the Tryon County militia at Fort Dayton for their march to support Colonel Peter Gansevoort at Fort Stanwix, which was under siege by Barry St. Leger’s British forces. Herkimer's troops, consisting mainly of Palatine German settlers, followed the north shore of the Mohawk River, and camped the first night west of Sterling (Staring) Creek. On August 6, Herkimer’s troops were ambushed in a small ravine by St. Leger’s British, Tory, and Indian forces. General Herkimer himself was wounded, but continued to lead his men in what became known as the Battle of Oriskany. General Herkimer died from his wounds on August 17, at his home near the present day Town of Danube.

It was attacked multiple times including the Attack on German Flatts (1778). Fort Dayton was also a base for soldiers aiding Johan Christian Schell after his stand at Schell's Bush and for pursuing Tory leader Walter Butler and his troops. After the destruction of Fort Stanwix in 1781 it was the western most fort in the Mohawk valley.

After the War

In July 1783 General George Washington toured Fort Dayton, when he visited the Mohawk Valley on an inspection tour.

The fort was eventually abandoned and razed. A memorial marker of the site of Fort Dayton can be found at the Historic Four Corners intersection on North Main Street in Herkimer.

The siege of Fort Dayton is represented in the historical novel Drums Along the Mohawk and the 'based upon the book' movie of 1939.