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1754, Fort Rouillé, population: 8

Fort Rouillé apparently prospered until the mid-1750s, when hostilities between the French and British increased. In 1754, the inhabitants of the French Fort Rouillé included:
- one officer;
- two sergeants;
- four soldiers; and
- one storekeeper.

1759, Fort Rouillé destroyed

Credit: Photo by Alan L Brown and used with the kind permission of the www.ontarioplaques.com website.

 

By 1759, British forces were putting increased pressure on French positions in the area. Fort Niagara had fallen in July after a nineteen day siege. Québec City would be placed under siege for three months before falling in September.

Feeling that Fort Rouillé could not be defended, the decision was made in July 1759 by the fifteen troops stationed there to set fire to the fort and retreat to Montréal.

When it was destroyed, the fort was approximately 180 x 180 feet, and was made up of five buildings:  the senior officers’ quarters, the soldiers’ quarters, a smithy, a magazine house and a kitchen.

1750, Fort Rouillé

Credit: Metropolitan Toronto Reference Library, T-32184

Click here for the full-size image.

Fort Rouillé, also known as Fort Toronto, was a French trading post established in 1750.  The fort was named after Antoine-Louis Rouillé (1689-1761), the Count of Jouy, appointed in 1749 by Louis XV to oversee France’s colonies. 

The Governor of New France, the Marquis de la Jonquière, had hoped that the fort would capture some of the trade between the Aboriginal population, many of whom were using the Humber River as a transport route, and the English fur-trading post located at the opposite side of Lake Ontario, at present-day Oswego, New York.

The fort was located in the area that is occupied today by the C.N.E., next to the windmill (i.e. the Windshare turbine), where a monument, as well as the outline of the original fort, can be found.