|


The Ohio Historical Society
reconstructed Fort
Meigs in the late
1960s and
opened the museum to the public in 1974. The reconstruction
of
the fort on its original location was one of the Society's major
projects to celebrate the nation's bicentennial. The archaeological
excavations associated with the project uncovered significant artifacts
that help scholars understand military life during the early republic.
Many of these objects are still on display at the site.
The
Society marked the completion of major restoration of the fort on
Saturday May 3, 2003. The project was one of the largest of the many
legacy projects the Society planned to commemorate the state's
bicentennial year.
Beginning in 2000, the Society tore down the aging stockade and rebuilt
it with new hand-hewn timbers. Workers also repaired the fort's seven
blockhouses, five artillery batteries and a quartermaster's warehouse.
The $6.2 million
renovation included construction of a Museum & Education Center, new and
renovated exhibits in the museum and four fort blockhouses,
reconstruction of the stockade and outdoor interpretive signs and
landscaping. The museum building is 14,000 square feet and cost $2.9
million.
The
Museum & Education Center features 3,000 square feet of exhibits on
Ohio's role in the War of 1812, classrooms for student and adult
workshops, and office and maintenance areas. The museum exhibit, Legacy
of Freedom: Fort Meigs and the War of 1812, focuses on the themes of
era, conflict, understanding and remembrance. These sections place the
War of 1812 into the context of the times and explain Fort Meigs' role
in this pivotal conflict. How historians and archaeologists learned what
happened at the fort is explored as well as how soldiers and their
descendants remembered the events of 1813.

New interactive exhibits in the fort's blockhouses portray the life
of a soldier, the building of the fort and dramatic accounts of the
sieges against the fort in 1813. In this latter exhibit, a graphic
timeline places the War of 1812 in the context of the combative
frontier-era Ohio that challenged the state's earliest settlers from
1750 - 1815, as France, England and the U.S. fought to gain control of
the region from American Indians.
Future enhancement to the site's
educational program will be made possible through the ongoing $1.5
million
Campaign for Fort Meigs.
The campaign will create the Society's
first endowment dedicated to one of its historic sites and fund
improvements for the museum, landscaping, outdoor recreation,
educational programming and collections care and acquisition.
View an
interactive map of
the fort.
|