Fort Baldwin

Fort Baldwin is a coastal defense land battery near the mouth of the Kennebec River in Phippsburg, Maine, United States. It was named after Jeduthan Baldwin, an engineer for the Colonial army during the American Revolution. The fort was constructed between 1905 and 1912 and originally consisted of three batteries.

  • Battery Cogan with two three-inch guns. Named in honor of a lieutenant in the 5th Continental Infantry during the American Revolution. Cogan, who had also been quartermaster of the 1st New Hamsphire Regiment, died August 21, 1778.
  • Battery Joseph Roswell Hawley with two six-inch pedestal guns. This battery also housed the fort's original observation station and electric equipment. Named in honor of Brigadier General Joseph R. Hawley who served with distinction during the American Civil War.
  • Battery Hardman with one six-inch pedestal gun. Named in honor of a Captain in the 2nd Maryland Regiment, Continental Army during the American Revolution. Hardman was taken prisoner at Camden, South Carolina and died while a prisoner of war on September 1, 1780.

During World War I, Fort Baldwin and Fort Popham held a garrison of 200 soldiers including the 13th and 29th Coast Artillery.

During World War II, between 1941 and 1943, D Battery, 8th Coast Artillery protected Fort Baldwin and its Fire Control Tower that could radio the precise position of enemy vessels to batteries in Casco Bay.

Coordinates: 43°45′00″N 69°47′06″W / 43.750°N 69.785°W / 43.750; -69.785

Links to related articles
Military installations of Maine
Army
Fort
  • Baldwin
  • Edgecomb
  • O'Brien
  • Gorges
  • Knox
  • Levett
  • McClary
  • Popham
  • Preble
  • Sullivan
Reservation
  • Bailey Island
  • Cape Elizabeth
  • Great Chebeague Island
  • Jewell Island
  • Long Island
  • Peaks Island
Air Force
Base
  • Dow (Bangor ANGB)
  • Loring
  • Presque Isle
Station
  • Brunswick
  • Bucks Harbor
  • Caswell
  • Charleston
  • Columbia Falls
  • Moscow
  • Topsham
Navy
Naval Air Station
  • Brunswick
Radio Station
  • Cutler
  • Otter Cliffs
  • Winter Harbor
Shipyard
  • Portsmouth
Prison
  • Portsmouth
Coast Guard
Station
  • Caribou
  • Eastport
  • Jonesport
  • Rockland
  • South Portland
National Guard
Air National Guard Base
  • Bangor
Air National Guard Station
  • South Portland
Army National Guard Camp
  • Keyes
Army National Guard Armory
  • Bangor
  • Belfast
  • Calais
  • Caribou
  • Fort Kent
  • Gardiner
  • Houlton
  • Lewiston
  • Norway
  • Portland
  • Sanford
  • Skowhegan
  • Waterville
  • Westbrook
Municipalities and communities of Sagadahoc County, Maine, United States
County seat: Bath
City
  • Bath
Towns
  • Arrowsic
  • Bowdoin
  • Bowdoinham
  • Georgetown
  • Phippsburg
  • Richmond
  • Topsham
  • West Bath
  • Woolwich
Unorganized
territory
  • Perkins Township
CDPs
  • Bowdoinham
  • Richmond
  • Topsham
Other
village
  • Iceboro

Famous quotes containing the words fort and/or baldwin:

    How often we read that the enemy occupied a position which commanded the old, and so the fort was evacuated! Have not the school-house and the printing-press occupied a position which commands such a fort as this?
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Confronted with the impossibility of remaining faithful to one’s beliefs, and the equal impossibility of becoming free of them, one can be driven to the most inhuman excesses.
    —James Baldwin (1924–1987)