Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Fort Cox, Eastern Cape

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Type
  
Block house

Condition
  
Ruins

Year built
  
1835

Controlled by
  
Open tothe public
  
Yes

Battles/wars
  
Cape Frontier Wars

Garrison
  
Fort Cox, Eastern Cape wwwantiquemapsandprintscomekmpsshopsrichben90

Similar
  
Sandile Dam, Buffalo River, Algoa Bay

Fort Cox near Middledrift in the Eastern Cape, South Africa was a frontier fort in the Amatola Mountains on a loop of the Keiskamma River.

History

Dating back to 1835, it was named after Major William Cox of the 75th Regiment and accommodated a garrison of six Royal Artillery, one company of British Infantry and 160 Hottentots. Like many fortifications of its time, it was simply an earth redoubt reinforced with stone and consisting of a quadrangle of strong stone cottages and walls. Surrounded by high hills, Mount MacDonald and Seven Kloof Mountain towering beyond, it was well situated as a base for patrols of the valleys and ravines of the Amatola and Keiskamma Mountains during the frequent wars and unrest of the period. The ruins of the fort are still to be seen. Fort White, situated on the Debe Flats, was its nearest neighbour on the way to King William’s Town. The site was abandoned in 1836 when the British left the region, and was rebuilt in 1846 to deal with the Seventh Xhosa War.

On 29 December 1850, during the Eighth Frontier War with the Xhosas, some 220 British troops were forced to retreat to Fort Hare after an unsuccessful attempt to relieve Sir Harry Smith, besieged at Fort Cox.

The site currently houses the Fort Cox College of Agriculture & Forestry.

References

Fort Cox, Eastern Cape Wikipedia