Welcome to
Old Fort Western


Linda Novak

Director/Curator

Contact Linda

Old Fort Western's Mission is To Protect, Preserve, and Interpret the National Historic Landmark Fort, Store, House, and Tenement on the Kennebec River in Maine’s Capital City.


Tour our reconstructed Fort, including the original 1754 Garrison building, 1921 reconstructed Blockhouses, 1988 reconstructed Watch Boxes, and 1916 reconstructed Palisade. Reconstructions are all based on archaeological evidence, written documents, and existing structures of the same era.


Old Fort Western operates under the Department of Community Services, overseen by Director Earl Kingsbury. The Department of Community Services is organized into smaller, specialized bureaus to enhance our effectiveness. This structure allows us to focus on different areas of community service with the required expertise.

General
Information
Event & Tour
Schedule
Fort Western
Timeline
Press
Release(s)

2024 season: Operating hours

MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND

Sunday - Monday

10:00 AM to 4:00 PM

JUNE

Friday - Monday

10:00 AM to 4:00 PM

JULY & AUGUST

Open Daily

10:00 AM to 4:00 PM

SEPTEMBER TO OCTOBER 14TH

Friday - Monday

10:00 AM to 4:00 PM

PLEASE NOTE: THE LAST TOUR OF THE DAY STARTS AT 3:30 PM

ACCESSIBILITY AND ADA COMPLIANCE

Please be aware that the main garrison is an original 1754 building, and the blockhouses are 1920 reconstructions. Therefore not all areas are wheelchair accessible. Fort Western is working to comply with all aspects of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).  If you require special accommodation, please contact us at least two weeks before your visit. We will make every effort to meet specific needs. Please note: unless a certified service animal, animals are not permitted.

ELECTRONIC DEVICES

While visiting, you are welcome to take pictures from your phone; however, we ask you not to take videos unless you call ahead and gain permission first. 

2024 SPECIAL EVENTS & TOUR SEASON: TENTATIVE SCHEDULE

PLEASE CHECK BACK PERIODICALLY AS THIS SCHEDULE IS TENTATIVE.


The Trading Post at Cushnoc 1628-1649

The area known as Cushnoc on the Kennebec River (now Augusta) was an important strategic location for early peoples of the Kennebec Valley. It became an essential part of the trade route network of the Abenaki because it is where tidal water meets the river current. In 1628, the Plymouth Colony built and established a trading post on the bank of the Kennebec River at Cushnoc. This trading post quickly became the center of the fur trade in the Kennebec Valley for the Plymouth Colony and helped the Pilgrims pay off their debt to their London backers. The fur trade peaked in 1634 and then steadily declined until 1654, when evidence suggests the trading post was leased out. In 1676, the remains of the trading post were reported burned during King Philip’s War, and the Kennebec Valley was depopulated of English settlements.

The Howard Store 1767-1807

As early as 1761, The Kennebec Proprietors were selling tracts of land from Fort Western and supplying goods to the settlers. In 1767 Captain Howard purchased the fort for $500. Samuel and William Howard operated the S & W Howard Store from the premises for the next forty years. Samuel, a sea captain, was located in Boston and acted as a broker for his brother William, as well as provided goods for settlers living in the greater Kennebec Valley. William lived in the north end of the garrison and operated a store and blacksmith shop out of the south end. In 1784 a separate building was built just north of the old fort garrison, and the store continued operating there until 1807. William continued running the store with his son Samuel Jr. until 1807 when all active accounts were signed over to Samuel Jr. Unfortunately, the Embargo Act of 1807 quickly put the Howard Store out of business. Howard's family descendants lived in the old garrison building until the 1850s. Five account books survive from the Howard Store, dating from 1767 until 1807. These books list the accounts of the earliest settlers of the central Kennebec Valley and include goods being purchased and bartered.

Benedict Arnold, 1775

The final military chapter of Fort Western was a staging area for Benedict Arnolds's march to Quebec. In September 1775, Benedict Arnold and 1,100 soldiers stayed at the old fort as they prepared for the assault on Quebec. Arnold stayed at Captain James Howard's Great House upriver from the fort while his officers, Daniel Morgan, and Aaron Burr, stayed with his son, William, in the old Garrison.

The Howard Family Home, 1767-1850s

Captain James Howard purchased the Fort lot and surrounding land in 1767 for 500 Dollars. William and Samuel Howard, Captain Howard's Sons, ran the S & W store and blacksmith shop out of the South end of the garrison. William Howard, and his family, lived in the north garrison. Samuel Howard, a sea captain, moved to Boston and stayed there until the 1780s when he moved back to the fort garrison. Upon his death in 1799, a probate inventory was conducted listing all items within the rooms of the garrison building. Since he and his brother William owned everything equally, the inventory listed everything and then split the value. Through listed items within each room, we gain insight into the use of each room. Also, in 1781, the blacksmith shop was removed from the south garrison, a new cellar was dug, and rooms were built to mirror the garrison's north end where William and his family lived. Captain Howard and his second wife, Susanna Cony, moved in 1782 and stayed there until the Captain died in 1787. The store was relocated to a new building just north of the north block house in 1784. At the time, Fort Western was located in what became Hallowell Township in Lincoln County. Augusta broke from Hallowell Township in 1797, and Kennebec County was established on February 20, 1799, from portions of Cumberland and Lincoln Counties. William's and Samuel's descendants. lived in the garrison until the 1850s.

Tenement House, 1850-1920

In the mid-1850s, the Howard family descendants moved out of the old garrison building, and it became a tenement. The garrison was split up into up to eight tenement apartments to house Augusta’s burgeoning working class, particularly those who worked in the Mills of Augusta and Hallowell. The Fort was mentioned often in the Kennebec Journal and was considered the “mean” part of town.

Restoration of Fort Western 1919-Present

The Fort taken by the City of Augusta through eminent domain in 1919 was turned over to James Howard's descendants, William H Gannett and Guy P Gannett, in 1920. The Gannett's renovated the garrison and built two new blockhouses patterned after the original blockhouse still standing at Fort Halifax (Winslow, Maine). Since Fort Western and Fort Halifax were constructed in 1754 by Gershom Flagg and Sons, housewrights out of Boston, it was logical to assume the existing block house in Winslow would be similar to the one initially built at Fort Western. The Gannett's then gifted the building back to the City of Augusta, and it opened as a museum on July 4th, 1922. In 1976, Fort Western became a National Historic Landmark. As part of the project to build the new Augusta City Hall in 1983, archaeological investigations were conducted to find evidence of outbuildings and fortifications of the Fort before reconstruction. As part of that process, archaeological evidence of the trading post at Cushnoc was discovered. Using written documents such as the probate inventory, account books, and muster rolls in conjunction with the archaeological collection, the Fort was reconstructed and furnished. Fort Western and Fort Halifax have the distinction of having the two oldest standing French & Indian War-era wooden buildings in the country: the Fort Western garrison and the Fort Halifax blockhouse.

Press Release from September 24, 2024


For more information, contact Linda Novak at (207)626-2385

 

Join Fort Western on October 19, 2024, for Four Forts, One Story, an Archaeological Bus Tour with the archaeologists who helped excavate each site on a day-long discovery excursion. Upon arrival at Fort Western, a Fort passbook will be given to each participant, and at each site, Fort Western Staff will hand out information cards about that site to add to it.

 

The vans will leave Fort Western at 9:00 am and head downriver to Fort Richmond Park in Richmond. Once there, Dr. Leith Smith, MHPC Historic Archaeologist, will give a tour of the Fort Richmond (1721-1755) archaeological site. The next stop will be Pownalborough Court House in Dresden, where Leon Cranmer, retired MHPC Historic Archaeologist, will direct a tour of the Fort Frankfort/Shirley (1752-1759) archaeological site. The bus will then head to Augusta, where Leon Cranmer and Linda Novak, Director of Fort Western, will share information on Fort Western’s (1754-1767) archaeological excavations. Also, at Fort Western, you can see artifacts from all four fort sites. Lunch will be at Fort Western; either bring your own and picnic on the grounds overlooking the Kennebec River or walk the short distance to Downtown Augusta and dine in one of the restaurants there. The last stop will be Winslow, where Leon Cranmer will give a tour of the Fort Halifax archaeological site (1754-1766). The vans will return to Fort Western at 4 pm.

 Fort Western will provide passes for participants to visit Old Fort Western for more in-depth museum tours during the regular hours of the 2025 Season.

 

The cost for this program is $50. Please call to register, 207-626-2385. Registration closes Friday, October 11, at 4 pm. Go to www.oldfortwestern.org for registration materials.

 

While at Fort Western, visit our gift shop and check out the following titles available for purchase: “Our Beloved Kin,” Lisa Brooks; “The Swordfish Hunters,” Bruce Bourque; “Cushnoc: The History and Archaeology of Plymouth Colony Traders on the Kennebec,” and “History & Archaeology of Fort Halifax,” Leon Cranmer and Perlston Pert; “French & Indian Wars in Maine,” Mike Dekker; “Forts in Maine,” Harry Gratwick; “Of Sorts for Provincials,” Jim Mullins; and, “A Soldier~Like Way,” R.R. Gale.


Fort Western is a not-for-profit organization whose mission is to preserve, protect, and interpret the National Historic Landmark, Fort, Store, and House on the Kennebec River in Augusta, Maine. For more information, please go to www.oldfortwestern.org, call 626-2385, visit www.oldfortwestern.org, or Facebook at Old Fort Western – Augusta, Maine. 

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Physical Address

8 Cony Street

Augusta, Maine 04330


Mailing Address

16 Cony Street

Augusta, Maine 04330


Phone: (207) 626-2385

Fax: (207) 620-8150

oldfort@oldfortwestern.org

ADMISSION RATES

Augusta Residents: FREE

Adults: $15.00

SENIORS (60+): $13.00

STUDENTS: $10.00 

CHILDREN 5-14: $8.00

CHILDREN UNDER 5: FREE

FAMILY UP TO 5: $35.00


VETERANS: $13.00

Active Military: Free

Group discounts available