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  1. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesFort Phantom Hill - TSHA

    Oct 22, 2020 · Fort Phantom Hill. Fort Phantom Hill was one of the second line of forts laid out in the early 1850s to protect the westward-moving frontier of Texas settlement. In 1849 the federal government sent Capt. Randolph B. Marcy to explore and mark the best route through the Comanchería, the vast region to the north and west of Austin inhabited by ...

  2. Feb 10, 2022 · Fort Phantom Hill was a United States Army post that was built to protect the westward-moving frontier of Texas settlement. It was one of the largest and most important forts in the early 1850s U.S. frontier. Originally, it was known as the “Post on the Clear Fork of the Brazos.”

  3. Fort Phantom Hill is on private land but the site is open during daylight hours. The grounds are 11 miles north of I-20 on FM 600 (a total of 14 miles north of Abilene). Nearby Lake Fort Phantom is popular for picnicking.

  4. About Us. The Fort Phantom Foundation. The primary 38-acre site of Fort Phantom Hill was contributed to the Fort Phantom Foundation in 1997 by Mr. and Mrs. Jim Alexander of Abilene. The site has been open to the public since 1972 and is presently maintained and operated by the foundation.

  5. Today, Fort Phantom Hill is one of the most pristine historic sites in Texas. Besides the stone chimneys, other remnants of the developed fort remain for visitors to explore at the 38-acre site. These include an intact stone powder magazine, a stone guardhouse, and an almost-intact commissary or warehouse.

  6. Jun 9, 2014 · 1. Fort Phantom Hill Marker. Inscription. By 1850 new settlers and travelers to the California Gold Rush were moving across Texas. This movement on the open plains increased hostilities between the newcomers and the Indians. The U.S. Army’s solution was a fort, called the Post on the Clear Fork of the Brazos.

  7. Fort Phantom Hill. Towns. Get your copy today! Fort Phantom Hill was one of the second line of forts laid out in the early 1850s to protect the westward-moving frontier of Texas settlement.

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