The Heroines of Bryan Station Fort

The Heroines of Bryan Station Fort

In August of 1782, the Bryan Station Fort found itself under siege by over 400 Indians, Canadians, and British Officers, who were all hiding in surrounding brush and woods waiting to draw the men of the fort outside the picket walls. The fort had run out of water and found itself in a precarious situation. It was decided that the women of the fort should follow their normal routine and fetch water from the nearby spring so the awaiting attack party would not suspect they had been detected.

Original Watercolor by Bryan Station Chapter Member Emily Utterf

Led by Jemima Suggett Johnson, 12 women and 16 girls gathered their pails and walked to the creek, under the watchful eye of the would-be attackers. It took over an hour to fill all the pails and then make the return journey of about 60 yards up the hill and back into the safety of the fort. Jemima's infant was waiting inside the fort, a son who later grew up to become the ninth Vice President of the United States, Richard Mentor Johnson. The Indians did attack the fort later that day and were beaten back. The Royalists retreated during the night and headed to Blue Licks while being pursued by Daniel Boone and his party of men.

/

In August of 2007, 225 years later, the Bryan Station Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Lexington Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Kentucky State Parks Foundation and the Kentucky Humanities Council sponsored a re-dedication and re-enactment ceremony at the site of the spring.

The Bryan Station Chapter of the DAR is proud to hold the brave women of Bryan Station Fort as the role models for our chapter.

t

l.

The walls of the monument honor both the ladies who gathered water and the men who defended the fort.

Bryan Station Chapter Regent Donna Durbin, Lexington Chapter member and KSDAR Treasurer Martha King, and Event Coordinator Linda Morgan pose with re-enactors.

The DAR Insignia is the property of, and is copyrighted by, the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

The below links are placed by our web host, Google, in exchange for free web hosting. They are not part of this website.

Web hyper-links to non DAR sites are not the responsibility of the NSDAR, the state organizations, or individual chapters.