Many earthen fortifications defended the city of Savannah and its
numerous water approaches after the Civil War broke out. One of these
defenses, Fort McAllister, protected the entrance to the Ogeechee River
and the strategic railroad and highway bridges upstream. From November
1862 to March 1863 the U.S. Navy bombarded the fort seven different
times without success. The fort finally fell to General Sherman in
December 1864; ironically, the final threat the fort faced was not from
an enemy trying to get up the river, but from one trying to get down the
river to the sea. In the 1920s auto magnate Henry Ford renovated the
fort and focused new attention on its history. In 1960 the State of
Georgia built on Ford's work and opened the fort as a State Historic
Site to mark the centennial of the Civil War. Today visitors can quietly
wander the massive, earthen walls and gun positions, gaze across the
wide river and expansive marshes, and ponder the thundering, blazing
reality that once played on this ground.