With support from the University of Richmond

New perspectives on how history is made

Fight is on to save Revolutionary War fort described as first federal land purchase

Somewhere in the ground overlooking the Delaware River, amid the trees and brush at a Paulsboro oil-storage terminal, is a long-forgotten piece of American history. Identified on a British map 230 years ago as a "rebel fort," the site was the nation's first federal land purchase, made the day after the Declaration of Independence.

It's the "birthplace of homeland security," says a group of local historians, preservationists and municipal officials who hope to restore the fort as a national historic site.

They hope to uncover its earthen walls - and possibly a few brick or stone tunnels - as well as artifacts such as cannon and musket balls and other relics.

But their plans have hit a snag.

Fort Billingsport, which held off British ships for about a month in 1777, seems poised for another battle, this one over historic preservation.
Read entire article at Philadelphia Inquirer