
In commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, we are please to announce a new database: New York: Fort Ticonderoga. This database contains 11,094 names across 10,400 records and was made possible through our collaboration with Fort Ticonderoga, the site of America’s first offensive victory during the American Revolution.
Founded in 1909, Fort Ticonderoga has for over a century been a leader in preserving objects related to military culture from North America in the “long 18th century” (1609-1815). Fort Ticonderoga’s collections are a singular resource in the study of the evolving role of subject, citizen, and soldier in the 18th century—a debate that links past to present and can inform the future. Fort Ticonderoga explores these relationships through the physical remains of the events that occurred on the site and the expansive collections that document the broader military experience and heritage of our founding era. The collections are distinct in that they comprehensively speak to the changing role of subject, citizen and soldier in society. Fort Ticonderoga’s collections encompass British, European, Native Nations, and African stories that show the complexities of a shared Atlantic history.
This database was created in partnership with Fort Ticonderoga as a research tool to help genealogists find their ancestors in the museum’s online collections as we commemorate the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution. We thank Fort Ticonderoga for their partnership and support.
This database is available to Individual-level and above American Ancestors members only. Consider membership.