Fort Bute was an older stockade fort built in 1766.
They had passed the wooden stockade forts of Baeza and Lobar, small, fledgling outposts in emptiness.
In 1743 the settlers at Number Four constructed a wooden stockade fort to provide for their own protection.
Few other buildings have played so important a part in our history as the rough stockade fort of the backwoods.
Fort Defiance was one of the last garrisoned stockade forts constructed in territorial Wisconsin.
It was once the site of an Indian stockade fort, designed to protect the tribe from the Mohawks in the west.
A temporary wooden stockade fort was constructed, also named Fort Louis after the old fort up river.
A historical highway marker along West Virginia Route 28 marks the approximate location of the stockade fort.
The community's buildings were burned, including the wooden stockade fort, and its people were either killed or taken prisoner.
On the right of the besiegers was a strong stockade fort, and on the left a work called the Star redoubt.