The fourth Chickasaw Bluff was the site of the French
Fort Assumption, used as a base against the Chickasaw in the abortive
Campaign of 1739. The Chickasaw Bluff secured Memphis from river floods, while a rare shelf of sandstone below provided a secure boat landing, making this the "only site for a commercial mart" between the
Ohio River and
Vicksburg, Mississippi. This location was also the meeting place of
d'Artaguette,
Chicagou and
de Vincennes before their ill-fated
1736 attack against the Chickasaw.
Fort Prudhomme The French built their
Fort Prudhomme, or Prud'homme, at one of the Chickasaw Bluffs in 1682.
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle (1643–87) was a French explorer. In 1682, La Salle led a
canoe expedition to explore the Mississippi River basin. The expedition landed to hunt, when one of their members went missing. The
armorer Pierre Prudhomme was assumed captured by Chickasaws. La Salle decided to stay and search for the missing member. La Salle had a
stockade built and named it Fort Prudhomme, after their lost man. This was the first structure built by the French in Tennessee. Days later, the missing man found his way back to La Salle. Prudhomme had lost his way while hunting. The
Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture suggests that the fort was constructed on the second Chickasaw Bluff near modern-day Randolph. Other research mentions the third Chickasaw Bluff as the location of the fort, at the border of modern Tipton and
Shelby counties. The fourth Chickasaw Bluff in modern Shelby County at
Memphis is also supported as a site of Fort Prudhomme.
American Revolution During the
American Revolution, the Chickasaw Bluffs were fortified by the British in an attempt to control the Mississippi River. In 1780, Captain
Edward Worthington was ordered by
George Rogers Clark to occupy the Bluff. Worthington and his Virginia soldiers constructed
Fort Jefferson to protect American interests along the Mississippi River. In 1781, Captain Worthington was ordered by General Clark to withdraw his company of soldiers and abandon Fort Jefferson, which was remote and indefensible from continuous Chickasaw attacks.
Fur trade A
federal fur trade post was established in 1802. It was removed to
Spadra Bluff, Arkansas in 1818. ==In popular culture==