Before 1795 After the
Indian Land Grant of 1784, it was decided by Governor Sir
Frederick Haldimand that the land opposite of
Bois Blanc Island (now
Amherstburg) was to be used as a strategic military defence post. In his book "Fort Malden and the Old Fort Days," Rev. Thomas Nattress asserts that, prior to the land grant, the area was used by the
Natives as a strategic military defence post. The Royal Canadian Volunteers began construction of
Fort Amherstburg in 1786. The fort served to maintain British influence among Indigenous tribes in the west. The was expanded in the years before the
War of 1812, and included the King's Navy Yard for the construction and maintenance of Provincial Marine vessels on the
Upper Great Lakes (Lakes Erie, Huron, and Superior). During the War of 1812 the fort was Britain's main defence on the Detroit frontier.
1795–1812 The British forces based at
Fort Detroit had to be withdrawn following the 1795
Jay Treaty and were re-assigned to Fort Malden. In January 1797 Captain Mayne, received word from
Robert Prescott, commander-in-chief of the British troops in Canada, that the military post was to officially be known as
Fort Amherstburg; named in commemoration of General
Lord Amherst, a British Commander during the
Seven Years' War. This title has never been formally changed. However, because the fort lay in the township of Malden, its inhabitants and the locals came to commonly and colloquially refer to it as Fort Malden. The name "Fort Malden" has remained ever since.
1812–1814: The War of 1812 Fort Malden's involvement in the
War of 1812 began on 2 July 1812, when British forces at Amherstburg captured the American
schooner Cuyahoga. The United States declaration of war on
Great Britain was made on 18 June of that year; yet, on 1 July, the US Army General
William Hull had still not received word of this development. Hull had chartered the
Cuyahoga to transport goods and army records, officers' wives, and the ill from
Toledo, Ohio to
Detroit,
Michigan Territory, passing by Amherstburg. In the deep water channel of the
Detroit River, the
Cuyahoga was captured by the British
brig . General Hull's reaction came on 12 July when, under his command, American forces crossed the Detroit River east of Sandwich (now
Windsor, Ontario) and took the town without opposition. Sandwich was to be used as a base of operations for the American advance into
Upper Canada, with General Hull commandeering the
Francois Baby House as his headquarters. On 13 July, Hull issued this proclamation to the residents of Upper Canada: On 16 July, General Hull's army was met with armed British resistance for the first time. A patrol out of Fort Malden engaged with Hull's troops at the
River Canard, where two British soldiers were killed, marking the first fatalities of the War of 1812. It is largely due to the unsettling effect that the Native allies' presence had upon General Hull that Fort Detroit was surrendered without resistance. The success of the
Siege of Detroit was an important factor in securing First Nations' support for the British at Fort Malden during the War of 1812. As such, strategic losses at
York and Niagara during the spring of 1813 placed the fate of Upper Canada's western territory in jeopardy. Resources had been directed to the Niagara region, and with no chance of receiving significant reinforcements
General Henry Proctor was forced to abandon Fort Malden in September 1813. Fort Malden was torched, and the fort's inhabitants fled, with American troops in pursuit. After engaging the Americans at the
Battle of the Thames, General Proctor was eventually successful in his retreat to Niagara. In September 1813, the British commander, Major General
Henry Procter, ordered Fort Amherstburg destroyed and began a retreat east towards
Burlington Heights. The retreat was the result of the British naval defeat at the
Battle of Lake Erie, including the capture of the
flagship, (built at the King's Naval Yard) which severed Procter's supply line. Procter's decision was also based on the fact that most of the fort's guns had been placed aboard the vessels of the British squadron and were lost during the engagement. Procter was subsequently defeated a few weeks later by forces led by Major General
William Henry Harrison at the
Battle of the Thames.
1813–1815: American occupation After General Proctor abandoned and burned Fort Malden in the fall of 1813, American forces occupied the towns of Sandwich and Amherstburg, including the land that the fort had stood on. During this time, the territory was used to conduct supply raids into nearby
Chatham-Kent and
London, Upper Canada. The Americans also began reconstruction of Fort Malden near its original location. After the U.S. ratification of the
Treaty of Ghent in February 1815 ended the war, the border between the United States and British North America was restored, returning the property of Amherstburg and Fort Malden to the British. The American army officially withdrew from Fort Malden on 1 July 1815. One such attempt by American "Hunter" Patriots occurred on 9 January 1838, when they attempted to raid the town of Amherstburg by crossing the Detroit River on the schooner
Anne. All three regiments, including bands of town militia and Native American warriors, successfully defended the town, taking twenty American prisoners including their commander "Brigadier-General" Edward Alexander Theller. There were also two other battles occurring at
Fighting Island and
Pelee Island, where a detachment of the Royal Artillery was dispatched to defend against the brigand attacks. However, once the violence of the Upper Canada Rebellion was quelled, the fort no longer required so many active military regiments. Consequently, the Royal Artillery left between June and July 1839 and the 32nd Regiment also withdrew, disbanding the militia a few months later.
1839–1858: The Pensioner Scheme As the regiments were leaving the fort and taking with them much of their military defence arms, the townsfolk of Amherstburg complained that they no longer were properly defended against an American invasion. The result was the stationing of the
34th (Cumberland) Regiment of Foot at Fort Malden. While there no longer existed any immediate threat of invasion to Upper Canada, the regiment was employed to improve the defence and utility of the fort in the event that Upper Canada would again be under threat. It was during this time from 1839 to 1840 that Fort Malden underwent its second stage of development under the supervision of Sir
Richard Airey, during which more
barracks and store houses were constructed. In 1840, there was a decision made to actually replace Fort Malden with an entirely new defence construction in Amherstburg. This would have been described as the third stage of building development from 1840–1842; however, such plans never came to fruition as the United States and Britain signed the
Webster–Ashburton Treaty after several years of negotiations. The result was that Fort Malden was used mainly to house existing or disbanded regiments as a stable garrison, such as the
Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment from 1842 to 1851 which was composed of veteran English soldiers. As there was no pressing military threat, life for both soldiers and townsfolk in Amherstburg was considered rather peaceful and marked as a period of growth both for the town and the fort. From 1851 to 1859 Fort Malden was occupied by army pensioners in what is known as the Pensioner Scheme. During this period, the town of Amherstburg and Fort Malden were redesigned to accommodate the large numbers of retired military men living in Upper Canada. As Canada had received responsible government following the Rebellions of 1837–1838, Britain no longer needed to maintain a significant military presence. It has been argued that in order to bring about the easiest transition for traditionally military defence towns such as Amherstburg, Britain enforced the Pensioner Scheme to substitute the standing regular army with pensioners to maintain the authoritative military presence. About 350 individual army pensioners, along with their families, occupied Amherstburg as part of the Pensioner Scheme. They were offered homes and small land grants in accordance with the Ordnance Reserves where in exchange they were employed by the province to act as police and an interim military force. The scheme at Fort Malden was considered to be very successful, not only for the pensioners but also the development of the town. Remaining either continually employed or receiving a full military pension, the retired soldiers were important financial assets to Amherstburg's local economy. Additionally, the pensioners, many being
Irish Catholic, added to the cultural development of Amherstburg, maintaining a strong presence until about the 1890s. It was determined that the Malden Lunatic Asylum would act as an extension of the Toronto Lunatic Asylum to house surplus patients. However, many of Fort Malden's buildings had been relatively neglected and so much of the first couple years of the fort's history as an asylum was allotted to necessary reconstruction. This remodeling was performed primarily under the architectural supervision of
Kivas Tully who used several of the patients as labourers to help build and remodel the asylum's structures. Some of the early remodeling was concerned with repairing the barracks to serve as separate wings for the male and female patients, as well as converting the brick hospital into a kitchen, with the guard house becoming the porter's apartment, used to house the water supply pump, and the officer's quarters becoming the home of the doctor's family. The First Medical Superintendent of the Malden Lunatic Asylum was Dr. Andrew Fisher. Under his tenure, several more buildings were constructed, such as a replacement laundry building in 1861 that would later be known as the Hough House. Later, in 1864, additions were added to the officer's quarters and staff sergeant's guardhouse. Additionally, in 1860, Dr. Fisher was responsible for the asylum's grounds being enclosed as two thousand yards of fenced-in outdoor space for patient recreation. However, the asylum's other practices do reflect the hegemonic attitudes towards mental illness during the nineteenth century. While the institution's medicinal expenses remained relatively low, this is likely due to the fact that alcohol was used instead in several treatments, as reflected in the same 1862 report, which cited that $1,125.88 was spent on liquor. Most of the patients treated in 1861 are listed as having been born in Ireland out of the 219 patients registered that year. In 1867, Dr. Fisher was forced to resign for alleged financial irregularities in the management of the Fort with Dr.
Henry Landor replacing him as the superintendent. In total, 30 employees worked at the Malden Lunatic Asylum with several being described as former pensioners. There are a few names of employees that are also found on the 1861 list of admitted patients, such as laundress Mary McGowan. In 1870, the Malden Lunatic Asylum was closed and its patients relocated to the London Lunatic Asylum as the Malden branch had always been considered a temporary location within the Provincial Lunatic Asylum system. Soon after Andrew Borrowman purchased Lot 4, he began to lease the land to John R. Park & William Borrowman to serve as the location of their Park & Borrowman Lumber Mill. Many of the buildings that had remained from the asylum years where either destroyed or converted to suit the industrial needs of the
lumber mill. For example, the previous laundry building had been converted into the company's titular mill. Consequently, the privatization of the fort was the focus of the turn of the twentieth century and was facilitated by the development of several manorial estates.
1935–present: The National Historic Site While the previous decades concerned the private ownership of the fort, the mid-twentieth century was focused upon reclaiming the land for public use. The first incident was in 1917 when an issue over unpaid back taxes resulted in the town of Amherstburg seizing a small area of privately owned land known as the Webber property and then turning over ownership of it to the Federal government. In the 1930s, the Cleveland Cliffs Iron and Coal Company were persuaded not to renew their mortgage on the north section of the northeast bastion, which resulted in the town purchasing the land and then turning it over to the
Department of Mines and Resources National Parks Division. After the death of Franklin A. Hough in 1946, the Federal government purchased Lot 4. Additionally, in 1958, the Federal government repeated the same action with the McGregor House, purchasing it from his estate. In 1938, the Fort Malden Management Committee was formed under the direction of
MP S. Murray Clark to advocate for the improvement of the fort and to build a museum. They received approval for the construction of a museum on the Webber property, which was completed in the summer of 1939. The first curator of the museum was Management Committee member David Botsford who was responsible for much of the early archive collection at the fort. Finally, on 28 December 1940, an
Order in Council from the Federal Government designated Fort Malden as a
National Historic Park with its official opening taking place on 22 June 1941. However, it was not until the purchase of Lot 4 that the Fort come to acquire many of its recognizable features, such as the Hough House, the earthworks, the bastion, the barrack, and the former laundry building. Currently, the National Historic Site is and includes the fort itself, the Brick Commissariat building constructed in 1831, the King's Navy Yard Park, and a stone
lighthouse built in 1836. Fort Malden's preservation and the popularity of the site has led to an increased interest in cultivating the Town of Amherstburg's heritage. In addition to the Fort's museum and archive, Fort Malden also offers educational experiences to the public. These tours, group sessions, and camps are primarily geared towards elementary school groups and focus on the fort's military past, as well as the daily settler life in the town. ==Underground Railroad==