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Civil War Defenses of WashingtonHiking from Fort Reno to Fort Mahan |
Hiking from Fort Reno to Fort Totten at the Civil War Defenses of Washington in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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A Hiker’s Guide
to the Civil War Defenses
of Washington
Fort Reno to Fort Totten
Self-Guided Tour
Third Edition June 2014
Library of Congress
Civil War Defenses of Washington
National Park Service
US Department of the Interior
2
Dear Hiker,
Welcome to the Civil War Defenses of Washington, D.C. Built on the topographic high points surrounding the capital
by Union troops between 1861 and 1864, these feats of engineering transformed the vulnerable capital into one of the
world’s most fortifed cities. Today, the surviving sites–some with preserved or reconstructed earthworks–are green
spaces in the midst of a densely populated urban area, and are knit into the history of their local communities.
Kym Elder, Program Manager
Civil War Defenses of Washington
Gregory A. Miller, Ph.D. , President
American Hiking Society
Donald E. Briggs, Superintendent
Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail
Designers:
Renee LaGue (2014)
Jessica L. Heinz (2013)
Welcome
The National Park Service and the American Hiking Society are pleased to present this hiker’s guide, produced with
the support of the National Park Service Connect Trails to Parks Program and Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail
Ofce. This guide contributes to the vision of a continuous trail system linking the Civil War Defenses of Washington;
proposed in 1902 as a vehicular parkway, this idea has been reimagined as a pedestrian and bicycle greenway system
within District neighborhoods. With a diverse network of parks, open spaces, trails, and extraordinary cultural
resources, the city is poised to become one of our Nation’s prominent trail towns. Happy hiking!
3
Trail Information
Planning Your Visit
For information on trail closures and alerts,
visit the web site for the Civil War Defenses
of Washington at http://www.nps.gov/cwdw
or call Rock Creek Park at (202) 895-6070.
Public restrooms are available at the Rock
Creek Nature Center in Rock Creek Park.
Restaurants, gas stations, and convenience
stores can be found along Connecticut
Avenue NW and Georgia Avenue NW.
You can help protect the defenses! You
play an important role in history when you
visit the Civil War Defenses of Washington.
For your safety and the preservation of
the forts, do not climb on the earthworks–
some are unstable and healthy vegetation
helps to prevent erosion. All natural and
cultural objects are protected by law. Stay
on established trails and keep dogs on a
leash. Leave rocks, animals, and wildfowers
in place. Learn to identify and avoid poison
ivy. Dial 911 for emergencies.
Rock
Creek
Nature
Center
Rock
Creek
Nature
Center
4
0
Route Overview: Fort Reno – Totten (9.3 miles)
500 1,000
2,000
Feet
Takoma Metro
Station
N
D.
C.
Fort DeRussy
Fort Stevens
Fort Slocum
sou
sA
ve.
. NE
s Rd
Rigg
NW
Av
e.
w
Ha
m
psh
ire
NW
Ne
NW
Fort Totten
Metro Station
nsa
Ka
.
Ave
Van Ness-UDC
Metro Station
ri A
ve.
NW
NW
Rock Creek
Park
16th St. NW
icut
ect
Tenleytown
Metro Station
Mis
.
Georgia Ave
nn
n
Con
Fort Reno
Fu
ed ture Route)
(Pla
Ne
bra
ska
Av
e
.N
W
Military Rd. NW
Fort Totten
Planning Your Visit
D
TO
N
G
LA
IN
RY
SH
A
A
M
W
Battleground
National Cemetery
5
M
AR
TO
D
NG
AN
HI
YL
AS
N
D.
C.
'
OT E
Courtesy of Library of Congress
Background Information
Fort Sites Highlighted in Blue
W
-
...
Washington, D.C. 1865 Map
6
Engineering For War
By 1864, Washington had become one of the most
fortifed cities in the world, with an encircling
array of forts, batteries, and military roads. At the
war’s end, Barnard reported that the defenses of
Washington included 68 enclosed forts and batteries,
emplacements for 1,120 guns (with 807 guns and 98
mortars actually mounted), 93 unarmed batteries with
401 emplacements for feld-guns, twenty miles of rife
trenches, three blockhouses, and thirty-two miles of
military roads linking the defenses.
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Background Information
Minnesota Historical Society
At the outset of the Civil War, the Federal capital of
Washington, D.C. was not well-prepared to defend
itself against potential Confederate siege or invasion.
Reeling from the unexpected Confederate victory
at First Manassas (Bull Run) in July 1861, the task of
fortifying the capital fell to Major John G. Barnard
(top right), the US Army’s chief engineer. Relying on
the blueprints outlined by his West Point professor
of engineering, Dennis Hart Mahan, in his Complete
Treatise on Field Fortifcation (1836), Barnard
marshaled Union troops, civilians, and escaped slaves
to transform a largely rural area into a landscape of
war.
7
Getting There
Tenleytown Metro Station to Fort Reno
Rd
.N
W
e)
ut
br
Ne
d. NW
Fessenden St. NW
Fort Dr. NW
You have arrived at Fort Reno. See following
pages for information
Davenport St. NW
.
Ave
40th St. NW
t
ticu
W
Ave N
NW
Tenleytown
Metro Station
500
nec
sin
Chesapeake St. NW
Albemarle St. NW
0
161 ft
0.2 mi
331 ft
0.1 mi
Con
con
Wis
Belt R
FortReno
Reno
Fort
Exit the metro station toward Wisconsin
Ave- east side
Continue straight from the metro exit on
Albemarle St. NW
Take the first left onto 40th St. NW
Turn right onto Chesapeake St. NW
Turn left onto gravel path to Fort Reno
0.4 mi
1,000
Feet
Fort Reno to Fort DeRussy
Continue on gravel path through Ft. Reno
Turn right on Fort Dr. NW
Turn left on Nebraska Ave. NW
Directions continued on page 11
1.8 mi
0.1 mi
0.7 mi
Fort Reno
as
ka
Av
e
no
.N
W
36
th
(Plan
S
ned
t.
Fut NW
ur
e
Ro
Re
8
History
' £.
-~-"···
ft,:y,,1 ·
kville
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Battery Reno, at the northern end of Fort
Reno, had an arsenal of 27 guns and mortars
including siege and 24-pound howitzers,
Parrott rifes, and Coehorn mortars. One of the
shells fred from Fort Reno traveled 3.5 miles
north, killing four Confederates. The fort was
destroyed when the city built an underground
water reservoir and tower on the site at the
turn of the century.
Defenses of
Washington, 1865.
National Archives
AC.NO
After the war, the original fort and surrounding
land was developed into Reno City, a modest community of AfricanAmerican freedman and white families. During the 1920s through
the 1940s, “urban renewal” transformed Reno City into a park and
reservoir. Homes of many residents were condemned and they were
forced to move to other parts of the city.
Fort Reno
Originally named “Fort Pennsylvania,” Fort Reno was the stronghold
of the northern circle of defensive forts. Renamed in 1863 after
.. !. : Major General Jesse Reno, the fort was built on the highest ground in
Washington at 409 feet above sea level. The lethal long-range siege guns
and Union communication tower were visible to Confederate troops
and guarded the entrance to the city at the intersection of River Road,
Rockville Road (now Wisconsin Ave), and
Brookville (now Belt) Road in Tenleytown.
••
9
The Site Today
1 Cultural Tourism DC’s tour ‘The Tenleytown Heritage
Trail’ begins here. It is a walking tour of this historic
crossroads community.
Fessenden St. NW
d. NW
Belt R
5
4
Av
e
2
0
100 200
40th St. NW
400
Feet
1
Ne
br
as
ka
2
NW
3
3 This spot marks the highest natural elevation in
Washington DC. Look for the marker on the ground
designating this point.
4 Fort Reno reservoir tower is operated by DC Water.
At one time, it could be seen from neighboring
Virginia. During the Civil War, a Union signal tower
took advantage of the same high ground. On June 11,
1864, Fort Reno was the first of the defenses to see
Confederate General Jubal Early’s army advancing on
Fort Stevens.
Chesapeake St. NW
5 Find the informational plaque on one of the walls of
the historic Jesse Reno School, built in 1904 to serve
the African-American children of Reno City.
Fort Reno
2 Notice the fire hydrants appearing throughout the
park. They remain as evidence of post-war Reno City’s
infrastructure. There is no above-ground evidence of
the Civil War fort.
10
Getting There
W
Av
e
.N
W
.N
Rd.
bra
Ne
anch
ska
Fort DeRussy
32n
27
t
NW
e)
po
NW
Ave. NW
Gran
tR
d.
ean
na
0
500
1,000
Feet
ve
h
Daven
r
t.
tS
Western
Ridge
Trail
r
Rd. NW
W
.N
Ridge Rd
ad Branc
h Rd. N
W
(Plann
ed future
rout
Rock Creek
Nature Center
o
Gl
Bro
Lin
th
36
W
.N
St
St. NW
d St
. NW
NW
Military Rd. NW
Rock Creek
Park
From Nebraska Ave NW, turn right onto
Military Rd. NW
To visit the nature center:
At the intersection with Glover Rd. NW
and Oregon Ave NW, turn right into the
paved Western Ridge Trail
Take the frst left to Rock Creek Nature
Center (hours: Wed-Sun 9am-5pm)
Exit straight out of Nature Center
Turn right onto paved section of Western
Ridge Trail, crossing Military Rd. NW
and continuing on paved trail
Take the frst right at the Ft. DeRussy sign
Go left at the fork onto a dirt trail
Continue straight on dirt trail
Fort DeRussy is on your left
1.9 mi
0.8 mi
0.1 mi
138 ft
138 ft
0.2 mi
125 ft
105 ft
0.1 mi
Fort DeRussy
d Br
Broa
33rd St. NW
St
Fort Reno to Fort DeRussy, con’t
n Ave. NW
th
Orego
27
11
Plan of Fort DeRussy, 1863
National Archives
History
Abatis (tree branches laid in a row
and tied with wire, sharpened tips
pointing outward)
Moat
Gun Platform
1
1
Parapet
Bombproof Magazine and
Guard House
Sally Port
Fort DeRussy was a little over one-third the size of
Fort Reno, with a perimeter of 190 feet. However, the
engineered feldworks would have provided a withering
feld of fre for any intruders. Today, Fort DeRussy’s
earthworks lie beneath the protective cover of mature
trees. During the Civil War, this entire hillside was cleared
to provide an unobstructed vantage point for guns
sweeping the Rock Creek valley and Milkhouse Ford.
Field of Fire: Angle of fre of siege guns in
embrasures.
Mr. Lincoln’s Forts: A Guide to the Civil War
Defenses of Washington
The defensive feld fortifcations for Washington, DC
were designed with one clear objective in mind: creating
an interlocking feld of fre from commanding artillery
positions in order to prevent a Confederate victory.
Each angle, slope, and feature of the earthwork’s form
contributed to this goal, as seen in this plan for Fort
DeRussy. At a larger scale, the network of batteries, rife
pits, and roads linking the forts provided a chain of men
and armaments capable of responding to any attack.
Fort DeRussy
Embrasure (protected opening from
which a soldier is able to fre)
12
The Site Today
1 Following the earthen trail to the fort, you will notice
a large boulder bearing an National Park Service
commemorative plaque.
2
1
0 25 50
Military Rd. NW
100 150 200
Feet
3 Take a look at the diferent trees and other vegetation
which now grow on the earthworks. Mature tree roots
and fallen leaves hold soil and prevent earthworks
from eroding. To make sure that trees do not fall over
and destroy the earthworks, hazard trees are removed
and younger trees are selectively allowed to grow to
maintain the composition of the forest.
Fort DeRussy
3
2 Directly behind the boulder is the entrance to the
surviving earthworks. Look for the parapet walls
and dry moat, which are still intact. Past the parapet
walls are the surviving remnants of the fort’s powder
magazines, now visible as earthen mounds covered in
vegetation.
13
Getting There
Fort DeRussy to Fort Stevens
hD
r. N
Beac
13th St. NW
ai
14th St. NW
hit
Fo r
t Ste
Fort Stevens
vens Dr. NW
l
W
r
Valley T
Fort
DeRussy
Rock Creek
Park
16th St. NW
W
Van Buren St. NW
tary Rd. NW
Mili
tie
rT
rai
1,000
Feet
W
do
Fort Stevens is ahead of you.
lor
a
Co
500
Morrow Dr. N
Bea
c
h
Dr
. NW
0
Av
e
NW
l
Kennedy
St. NW
~0.4 mi
~120 ft
~0.3 mi
~0.5 mi
~0.5 mi
~0.2 mi
0.4 mi
0.4 mi
Fort Stevens
Aspen St. NW
Exit Fort DeRussy and turn left onto trail
Turn right at fork in trail
Turn left onto paved trail and follow as it
curves left across Rock Creek and left along
Beach Drive
Immediately after passing under bridge,
cross the road and enter Valley Trail
toward Riley Spring Bridge/Boundary
Bridge, or a fatter hike, continue on paved
trail.
If on paved trail, turn right onto naturalsurface trail just before next bridge
If on valley trail, turn right at the T
Both routes follow the creek and pass a
footbridge on the left. Continue straight.
At the signed junction, turn right on the
Whittier Trail
Exit trail and turn right on 16th St. NW
Turn left onto Fort Stevens Dr. NW
~2.7 mi
14
History
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
defensive landscape of war. “Camp
Brightwood,” as the area was known,
attracted fugitive slaves seeking refuge
behind Union lines, who joined units
of the US Colored Troops.
In 1933, Fort Stevens became a
property of the National Park
Service. Three years later, the Civilian
President Lincoln was standing on the Conservation Corps began a partial
reconstruction of the fort as seen
fort’s parapet wall to view the battle
when a sharpshooter’s bullet narrowly today, including the northern parapet
wall with its revetments, embrasures,
missed him. This was the only time
magazine, gun platforms, and ditch.
in American history when a sitting
president came under direct fre from
an enemy combatant. In the end,
Union forces repulsed the attack and
Early withdrew his army.
The nearby community of Brightwood
had been a home to freed AfricanAmericans since the early 1820s,
and African-American landowners
such as Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas saw
their farms transformed into the
Historical Society of Washington D.C.
Fort Stevens
The only clash between Federal and
Confederate troops in Washington,
DC happened at Fort Stevens. This
fort was built to defend the 7th St.
Turnpike (Now Georgia Avenue).
Led by General Jubal Early, the
Confederate attack on Fort Stevens
occurred on July 11-12th, 1864.
15
The Site Today
1 Notice the concrete ‘logs’ that were used in the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC)-era reconstruction. The
National Park Service recently repaired several of
these pieces. Their material was designed to “weather”
similarly to the CCC concrete logs.
13
th
St.
NW
Rittenhouse St. NW
1
3
Quackenbos St. NW
4
0
25 50
100
150
Feet
3 Next door stands the third Emory Church, built after
the Civil War. The first church was founded in 1832. By
mid-century, its congregation reflected the deep divide
in religious communities over slavery and aligned
with the South. However, by 1862, the church assisted
Union troops expanding the fort and the church was
dismantled by soldiers to construct the earthworks.
4 As a side trip, explore Cultural Tourism DC’s
Brightwood Heritage Trail linking Fort Stevens to the
stories of its historic community.
Fort Stevens
2 Located on one of the parapet walls of the fort is the
commemorative stone dedicated to President Lincoln.
Stand next to the stone and look northwest; the top
of the former Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital
is above the treeline a mile away. During the battle,
Confederate sharpshooters perched in trees at the
hospital were able to shoot as far south as the fort.
2
Getting There
Fort Stevens to Battleground National
Cemetery and back
Battleground
National Cemetery
Turn left onto Quackenbos St. NW
Turn left on Georgia Ave. NW, crossing
Piney Branch Rd. NW and Van Buren St.
NW
Underwood St. NW
NW
d.
hR
nc
Bra
Sheridan St. NW
ey
Pin
Rittenhouse St. NW
Quackenbos St. NW
250
500
750
Feet
13th St. NW
125
463 ft
0.5 mi
Battleground National Cemetery is on your
right
Turn left out of the cemetery on Georgia
Ave NW, crossing Piney Branch Rd. NW
Turn left on Quackenbos St. NW
Continue on page 19
Fort Stevens
0
8th St. NW
13th St. NW
14th St. NW
Tuckerman St. NW
9th St. NW
Georgia Ave. NW
Van Buren St. NW
1 mi
0.5 mi
Battleground National Cemetery
16
History
The site for Battleground National
Cemetery– half a mile north of
Fort Stevens– was selected by
Union Quartermaster General
Montgomery C. Meigs, who also
designated Arlington Cemetery. His
vision of the national cemetery as a
memorial landscape was repeated at
battlefelds throughout the south.
President Lincoln dedicated the
cemetery shortly after the July
1864 Battle of Fort Stevens. The
Library of Congress
two-day battle marked the defeat
of the Confederate General Jubal
Early’s ofensive campaign against
Washington. Over 900 men were
killed or wounded during the
confict, and 40 Union soldiers who
died while defending Fort Stevens
were interred here. The 41st and last
burial of a Union veteran took place
in 1936 (pictured bottom right).
NPS photo
The center of the cemetery is
marked by a fagpole, and the marble
headstones are replacements for
the earliest headstones, which were
made of wooden planks.
Behind the headstones, a marble
rostrum is used to conduct yearly
Memorial Day services. The four
granite pillars are in memory of
the four volunteer companies who
fought at Fort Stevens.
National Archives
Battleground National Cemetery
17
Exploring the Site
1 Facing Georgia Avenue are four regimental monuments
commemorating units engaged in the Battle of
Fort Stevens. Read the various dedications on the
monuments.
Georgia Ave NW
2 Built as a stage for commemorative events, the rostrum
was dedicated on Memorial Day, 1921.
1
2
4
0
25
50
100
Feet
3
3 A series of cast-iron markers outside the circle of
headstones captures the words of Theodore O’Hara’s
famous poem, ‘The Bivouac of the Dead,’ originally
written in memory of those who died during the
Mexican War (1846-48).
4 Note the beautiful native Seneca sandstone used to
build the cemetery superintendent’s lodge, designed
by Gen. Meigs. Built in 1871, the lodge replaced an
earlier single-story wooden structure. The building was
restored by the National Park Service in 2011 and now
serves as park ofces.
Battleground National Cemetery
18
19
Getting There
Fort Stevens to Fort Slocum
Battleground
National Cemetery
NW
Underwood St. NW
hR
d.
Tuckerman St. NW
Fort Slocum is on your left
Bra
nc
Sheridan St. NW
Oglethorpe St. NW
Nicholson St. NW
Fort Slocum
.N
W
Madison St. NW
Kennedy St. NW
as
1,000
Feet
Av
e
Longfellow St. NW
ns
Georgia Ave. NW
W
5th St. NW
ri A
ve N
8th St. NW
500
sou
Peabody St. NW
9th St. NW
13 th St. NW
0
Mis
Quackenbos St. NW
3rd St. NW
Fort Stevens
Ka
Pin
ey
Rittenhouse St. NW
0.3 mi
0.3 mi
0.4 mi
0.1 mi
0.1 mi
Fort Slocum
13 th St. NW
Head east on Quackenbos St. NW
Turn right onto 8th St. NW
Turn left onto Nicholson Ave. NW
Turn right onto 3rd St. NW
Turn left onto Madison St. NW
Van Buren St. NW
1.2 mi
20
The only remaining evidence of
Fort Slocum is an eroded feld gun
battery site and line of rife pits.
Look at the map on the next page
to see the original fort layout and
location on a contemporary map.
The main fort structure was located
where there is now a residential
neighborhood.
Library of Congress
Fort Slocum was home to white
soldiers and the African American
foot soldiers of the 4th U.S. Colored
Infantry from Baltimore, a regiment
comprised of both freedmen and
escaped slaves. President Lincoln
authorized the unit in June 1863
after giving the Emancipation
Proclamation.
Library of Congress
The soldier family shown above was
encamped with the 31st PA Infantry
at Queen’s Farm in the vicinity of
Fort Slocum. Some wives insisted on
staying with their husbands during
the war. In addition to taking care
of her family, this woman may have
worked as a camp laundress or nurse
(Library of Congress annotation).
Fort Slocum
Named for Colonel John Slocum,
who was killed in 1861 at the First
Battle of Manassas, Fort Slocum
was constructed by the 2nd Rhode
Island Infantry. With its 25 guns
and mortars, the fort commanded
the intersection of the left and right
forks of Rock Creek Church Road
(Near today’s New Hampshire Ave.
and McDonald Place NE; see map
on page 22). Its range also included
the defense of Fort Stevens to the
west; the opening shots of the 1864
battle were fred from here.
History
21
Exploring the Site
sA
ve.
NW
Peabody St. NW
Ka
nsa
Oglethorpe St. NW
Original Fort
Location
Location of
Outlying Battery
400
Feet
1st St. NW
Longfellow St. NW
0 100 200
2nd St. NW
Madison St. NW
North Capitol St. NE
1
Library of Congress
Fort Slocum
1 You will need to use your imagination at this site, since
only remnants of a parapet exist. Note the topography
of the site, which culminates in a rise toward the
preserved areas. As you climb to the location of the
picnic pavilion, you will see a very different panorama
from the historic photo below of the 31st PA camp at
the surrounding farmland. Both the elevation of the
site and the open, 360-degree views of the landscape
were key elements in the construction of defensive
earthworks such as Fort Slocum. How has the view
changed from the days of the Civil War?
22
Getting There
Fort Slocum to Fort Totten
McDonald Pl. NE
sA
ve
nsa
NE
s Rd
Rigg
NW
re
Av
e
shi
mp
Ha
w
NE
Fort Totten
en Dr NE
ott
tT
Ne
St
For
1,000
Feet
North Capitol St. NW
500
h
Fort Totten
Metro Station
Gallatin St. NW
0
4t
Rock Creek
Church Rd NE
NE
First Pl. NE
Kennedy St. NW
Mis
sou
ri A
ve N
W
R d.
Ka
Longfellow St. NW
Blair
NW
Madison St. NW
0.2 mi
0.1 mi
400 ft
0.1 mi
0.1 mi
0.4 mi
Fort Totten is on your left up the gravel drive
Directions from Fort Totten to Fort Totten
Metro Station
Turn right out of Fort Totten onto Fort
Totten Dr. NE
Turn right on Gallatin St. NE and follow
paved trail across feld
Turn right on First Pl. NE (no sign) and
continue to metro station
Fort Totten Metro Station is ahead of you
0.6 mi
0.3 mi
0.2 mi
0.1 mi
Fort Totten
Continue east on Madison St. NW
Turn right onto North Capitol St.
Turn left to cross North Capitol St. at
Kennedy St.
Continue east on Kennedy St. NE
Turn right on Blair Rd. NE
Cross Riggs Rd. NE and continue on Rock
Creek Church Rd. NE
Continue on Fort Totten Dr. NE
Fort Slocum
1.1 mi
23
History
Entrances to the forts were designated by main gates. Today, visitors
and residents pass through a diferent kind of entrance near the
original fort site: The Fort Totten Metro station.
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Library of Congress
Fort Totten
Fort Totten was constructed in 1862 on another topographic high
point. It had an extensive feld of fre guarding the approach to the
US Soldiers Home (US Military Asylum), which then served as
President Lincoln’s summer home. Fort Totten’s artillery consisted
of 20 mounted guns and mortars, including eight 32-pounders.
The 100 pounder Parrott rife provided long-range support to Fort
Stevens during the Confederate attack on July 11-12, 1864.
24
Exploring the Site
Fort Totten
Metro Station
Gallatin St. NE
1
Fort Totten
Dr. NE
North Capitol St. NE
2
150
300
600
Feet
B
s
ate
E
.N
Rd
3 Consider taking a 0.7-mile side trip to the Lincoln
Cottage, operated by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation. The Lincoln family lived at the US
Soldiers’ Home during June-November of the years
1862, 1863, and 1864. This ‘military asylum’ was built
on the third highest spot in the city in 1851, and served
to care for disabled and retired veterans. The powerful
guns atop the hill at Fort Totten helped to guard
Lincoln’s frequent commutes from the White House to
his family’s residence here.
Fort Totten
2 Compare the drawing here with the historic map on the
previous page. Can you see the resemblance between
today’s Fort Totten Drive and the military road shown
on the earlier map?
3 0.7 mi
0
1 Follow the gravel access road adjacent to the Fort
Totten interpretive sign. In the wooded area at the
top of the hill and to the right of the road, look for
the parapet walls and dry moat. Beyond the walls and
moat are earthen mounds that are the remains of the
bombproof, an underground chamber protected by
earth over a timber roof.
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Potomac National Scenic Heritage Trail
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The Civil War Defenses of Washington Trail is part of a network of trails and routes recognized, collectively, as the
Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail. The trail corridor embraces earlier visions to connect the Potomac River
with the forks of the Ohio River beyond the western mountains. Today, visitors can explore a variety of contrasting
landscapes on foot, bicycle, horse, and boat.
Regional Trail Network
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For Additional Information:
American Hiking Society: www.americanhiking.org
Capital Bikeshare: https://www.capitalbikeshare.com/
Civil War Defenses of Washington: www.nps.gov/cwdw
Cooling, B.F III. and W. H. Owen II. Mr. Lincoln’s Forts:
A Guide to the Civil War Defenses of Washington. Laham,
Maryland: Scarecrow Press, Inc, 2010
Cultural Tourism DC: www.culturaltourismdc.org
Fort Stevens Podcast:
www.nps.gov/rocr/photosmultimedia/multimedia.htm
Metro Rail and Metrobus: www.wmata.com
Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail Hiker’s Guide:
www.nps.gov/pohe/planyourvisit
Sources:
GIS Aerial Photo Basemap Source: Esri, DigtalGlobe, GeoEye,
i-cubed, USDA, USGS, AEX, Getmapping, Aerogrid, IGN, IGP,
swisstopo, and the GIS User Community
Resources
Civil War Defenses
/ Additional
of Washington
Information
National Park Service
US Department of the Interior