Company F of the 11th Vermont Infantry Regiment was assigned to Fort Bunker Hill to assist in the defense of the city until November 17, 1862.
Thirteen guns were mounted in the rectangular-shaped fort, which operated until the conclusion of hostilities in 1865.[3][2]
The following armament was assigned to Fort Bunker Hill:
A supporting field battery stood a few yards to the North.[5]
Post Civil War
The site of the fort is bounded by 14th, Otis, 13th, and Perry Streets NE in Brookland, DC. Today, little remains of the fort, and the site is maintained by the National Park Service.[2]
One of the Civil War Defenses of Washington erected in the fall of 1861, Fort Bunker Hill occupied an important position between Fort Totten and Fort Lincoln in the defense of the National Capital. Thirteen guns and mortars were mounted in the fort.
United States Department of the Interior
National Park Service
A nearby road was named Bunker Hill Road after the fort, but it was later renamed Michigan Avenue.
NPS sign of Fort Bunker Hill
Image of NPS Map at Fort Bunker Hill site in Washington, DC