Talk:Fort Shelby (Michigan)

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More contradictory evidence as to the name[edit]

Another wrinkle in the question of whether Fort Shelby was ever officially called Fort Detroit, or whether that was simply a common name for it. The following source says "Fort Lernoult was officially renamed Fort Detroit in 1805" but does not give a citation for the claim:

  • Zacher, Christian K.; Cayton, Andrew; Sisson, Richard (2007), The American Midwest: An Interpretive Encyclopedia, Indiana University Press, ISBN 0253348862, p. 1776

The other sources that say the fort was actually named Fort Detroit suggest that the renaming happened in 1796, and of course other sources categorically state that the fort was named Fort Lernoult until it became Fort Shelby. The article above references the following sources, one of which might be the source for the 1805 claim:

  • F. Clever Bald (1948), Detroit's First American Decade, 1796 to 1805
  • Brian Leigh Dunnigan (2001), Frontier Metropolis: Picturing Early Detroit, 1701-1838
  • Philip P. Mason (1964), Detroit, Fort Lernoult, and the American Revolution
  • Howard H. Peckham (1994), Pontiac and the Indian Uprising

I think the matter is of more than academic interest, since there are so many articles on Wikipedia that refer to the fort as "Fort Detroit." Anyone with access to the above sources or other sources that seem authoritative on the subject? -Sarcasmboy 06:50, 18 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I updated the article after finding a source that cites an August 5, 1805, letter from Secretary of War Henry Dearborn stating that the fort had been renamed Fort Detroit. -Sarcasmboy 23:29, 27 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]