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|location= in [[Cedar Island (Niagara River)|Cedar Island]], [[Kingston, Ontario]] [[Canada]].
|location= in [[Cedar Island (Niagara River)|Cedar Island]], [[Kingston, Ontario]] [[Canada]].
|image=Shoal frederick.jpg
|image=Shoal frederick.jpg
|caption=Line of defence: three Martello towers [[Shoal Tower]], [[Fort Frederick]], Cathcart) in [[Kingston, Ontario
|caption=Line of defence: three Martello towers [[Shoal Tower]], [[Fort Frederick]], Cathcart
|type=[[Martello tower]]
|type=[[Martello tower]]
|built=1848
|built=1848

Revision as of 16:13, 6 April 2010

Cathcart Tower
in Cedar Island, Kingston, Ontario Canada.
Line of defence: three Martello towers Shoal Tower, Fort Frederick, Cathcart
TypeMartello tower
Site history
Built1848
In useprotect Kingston's harbour and the entrance to the Rideau Canal.
Materialslocal limestone
Map of Kingston Ontario 1875 includes Cathcart Tower

Cathcart Tower is a Martello tower located on Cedar Island just off the shore from historic Fort Henry in Kingston, Ontario Canada. It is one of four such towers built in the 1840s to protect Kingston's harbour and the entrance to the Rideau Canal.

Built in 1848, this limestone tower is 11 m high and 16,5 m in diameter.[1] It is surrounded by a shallow ditch and by a glacis extending to the shorelines on three sides. The guns of Cathcart Tower covered the eastern approaches of Kingston Harbour. A dispute between Great Britain and the United States over the boundary between British Columbia and Oregon that threatened to lead to war and to the invasion of Canada prompted their construction.[2] When war was averted, Cathcart Tower was used for a time as a barracks for soldiers garrisoned at nearby Fort Henry. Eventually it was abandoned. It is part of the Kingston Fortifications National Historic Site of Canada and is within the boundaries of St. Lawrence Islands National Park. The tower is also classified as a CRM1 resource.

References

  1. ^ "Nomination of the Rideau Canal for Inscription in the World Heritage List". Government of Canada, Parks Canada Agency. 2007-06-22. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  2. ^ "The Origins of Structures in St. Lawrence Islands National Park". Government of Canada, Parks Canada Agency. 2008-05-21. Retrieved 2009-02-08.

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