
Yamacraw Bluff, commanding the eastern approach to Savannah, has been the site of several fortifications, beginning with a battery of twelve cannon roughly on the site of the Cotton Exchange (1.4), documented in the Gordon View print of 1734 (see page 6). By the time of the Revolution in 1776, American forces constructed a simple battery on the easternmost end of the bluff (incorporating part of the Trustees’ Garden), which was captured by British forces in 1778 and rebuilt as a bastioned work named Fort Prevost. This was renamed Fort Wayne with the British surrender of the city. A new fort was built on the site beginning in 1808 as part of the Second System (a series of coastal forts authorized by the U.S. Congress in 1807). This fort consisted of a crescent-shaped earthen parapet, barracks and storage buildings, a magazine, and a shot furnace. The site was purchased in 1852 by the Savannah Gas Light Company. The present brick retaining wall overlooking the Savannah River, constructed by the City in 1871, roughly corresponds to the parapet of the Second System fort.