From the November 13, 2020, Bay Journal "Fort Wool, nesting seabirds both need saving" by Terry McGovern.
Recently, efforts have been made to turn Fort Wool into a habitat for nesting seabirds. But, Fort Wool is also a historic site and saw use during the Civil War and other wars, including World War II.
It was built on an island of granite blocks after the War of 1812, partially in response to the British attack on Washington, D.C. It and the completion of nearby Fort Monroe allowed American cannons to control access to Hampton Roads.
It also served a s a summer residence for two U.S. presidents: Andrew Jackson and John Tyler and it was an initial sanctuary for enslaved blacks escaping to freedom under the protection of the Union Army. Guns from Fort Wool fired on the Confederate ironclad CSS Virginia in the Battle of Hampton Roads in March 1862.
Union president Abraham Lincoln observed the first Union attempt to take Norfolk, Virginia, from the fort's ramparts in May 1862.
Until recently, the fort was visited by thousands of people a year and it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
--Brock-Perry
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