40°47′31.3″N 73°46′33.9″W / 40.792028°N 73.776083°W
Fort Totten is a former U.S. coast defense fort and Army installation near Bayside, Queens in Queens County, New York. It is located on the north shore of Long Island, on a peninsula named Willets Point. Fort Totten is at the head of Little Neck Bay, which is also the place where the East River widens to become Long Island Sound. While the U.S. Army Reserve continues to maintain a presence at the fort, the property is now owned by the City of New York.
History
editThe history of Fort Totten has included several distinct stages.[1] Site of a Third System fortification and water battery during and after the Civil War, the fort became the home of the (U.S.) Engineer School of Application in 1868, and was the site of basic research and development of the Army's submarine mining program and its use of coast defense mortars up until about 1895. During the so-called Endicott era, Fort Totten saw the construction of a variety of batteries of rifled coast defense artillery, which remained in place up to the 1930s, when the fort became principally a site for the anti-aircraft defense of New York harbor. After WW2, Fort Totten became a site in the Nike missile defense program, and was later turned over to the City of New York, which now runs most of the former fort as a public park.
Early History
editConstruction began on Fort Totten in 1862 after the land was purchased by the U.S. Government in 1857 from the Willets family. The fort is close to the neighborhoods of Bay Terrace, Bayside, Beechhurst and Whitestone, and it is close to the northeast corner of Queens County, New York. The original purpose was to protect the East River approach to New York Harbor, along with Fort Schuyler, which faces it from Throgs Neck on the opposite side of the river entrance. The fort was named in 1898 after Joseph Gilbert Totten.
The Post-Civil War Period
editThe Endicott Period of Coast Defense (1895-1925)
editThe Inter-War Years and WW2
editThe Post-War Period
editIn 1954, the fort became a Project Nike air defense site. Although no missiles were located at Fort Totten, it was the regional headquarters for the New York area; administrative offices and personnel housing was located at the fort. Fort Totten was also the headquarters for the 66th Anti-Aircraft Missile Battalion, Battery D, whose missiles were located at nearby Fort Slocum on Hart Island. Headquarters of the 41st AAA Gun Battalion was also stationed here. 90MM cannon Batteries of the 41st were located throughout Long Island. During the mid-1950s the 90 MM guns were replaced with Nike missiles. This use of Fort Totten was discontinued in 1974.
The Present
editMuch of the fort has become a public park and is open for tours by the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation. It is accessible by the Cross Island Parkway and Brooklyn-Queens Greenway. The Fort Totten Visitor's Center has been refurbished and houses a museum with exhibits about the history of Fort Totten.[2]
Parts are used by the New York Police Department and the New York Fire Department as a training center.
During the winter months, a large variety of migratory waterfowl can be observed in the surrounding waters: Little Bay to the west, Long Island Sound to the north, and Little Neck Bay to the east. Most buildings are dilapidated and unused. Fort Totten is also a sports complex, with an outdoor pool, baseball fields and three soccer fields used for youth soccer.
The Fort Totten Officers' Club, known as "the Castle," is home to the Bayside Historical Society, which hosts events, historic exhibitions and cultural programs. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.[3]
The Officer's Club can be clearly seen in the closing scene of an April 2009 episode of the TV series Fringe, filmed at the Fort, in which the FBI delivers to an undisclosed location a child found to have been sealed for years in a building vault.
The Fort is a New York City Historic District and the Club a Designated Landmark. The club building was apparently designed by Robert E. Lee in his pre-Civil War capacity as a military engineer, although some historians believe that the actual design was done by a subordinate and merely approved by Lee. The building was designed in the neo-Gothic style popular at the time and was not created specifically for Fort Totten but rather was a generic design approved by the Army for use at military installations. Identical structures were built at other Army forts and the Castle design was adopted by the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers as their insignia, although the reason for this action is murky. A local tradition is that the Corp of Engineers symbol derived from the Fort Totten building, but the reverse is more likely: the building design was based on a Castle in part because this symbol had long been identified with Army engineers. When Fort Totten's Castle was restored in the 1990s, the Corp of Engineers was contacted in the hope that they would participate, particularly since the Fort Totten Castle was occupied at one time by the Corp of Engineers, but the military failed to show any interest.
References
edit- ^ A complete history of the fort, from Colonial times up through the 1950s, can be found in Gaines, William C, "Fort Totten and the Coastal Defenses of Eastern New York," The Coast Defense Study Group Journal, Vol. 11, Issues 1, February 1997, pp. 41-98.
- ^ History Comes Alive At Fort Totten Park
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
External links
edit- A recent photoessay on the abandoned Fort Totten Hospital
- Fort Totten - NYC Dept. of Parks & Recreation
- Bayside Historical Society
- 1920 map of Fort Slocum, Fort Totten, and Fort Schuyler (PDF)
- Coast Defense Study Group
- Fort Totten, NY Alumni
- New York State Military Museum - Information about Fort Totten
- Pictures of Fort Totten Park
Totten Category:East River Totten Category:Military and war museums in New York (state) Category:Museums in Queens, New York Category:New York (state) in the American Civil War