Fort History
In 1761, during the French and Indian War, the fort came under British control. While the French sought alliances with indigenous populations through practices such as gift-giving and intermarriage, the British approached Native relations in a more domineering fashion and with little regard towards establishing the mutually beneficial arrangements that had characterized French rule. This led to the uprising known as Pontiac's Rebellion. In the spring of 1763, supporters of the Ottawa leader attacked Fort St. Joseph and other posts in the Great Lakes region in order to force the British from the area and encourage the return of the French. The English did not re-garrison the fort after this attack until a brief occupation in 1779; however French traders remained in the area until roughly 1780. In 1781 a small contingent of French and Natives supported by the Spanish governor at St. Louis raided the fort, claiming it for Spain, though remaining at the site for only a day. After this episode the post was largely abandoned, though trade likely still continued in the general vicinity into the nineteenth century after the area had become part of America's Northwest Territory.