The French were the first Europeans to explore the Niagara Region and Old Fort Niagara will highlight this early history with two days of living history programs and demonstrations this weekend.
The fort will today welcome more than 300 French and Social Studies students for a day of educational programs. Students will rotate among 17 learning stations that illustrate French architecture, trade, military life and cuisine. Today’s programs are conducted in cooperation with the Western New York Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of French.
The program continues on Saturday with programs for the public. New this year will be reenactors from Montreal explaining 17th-century military engineering and siegecraft. Other demonstrations will include the fur trade, mounting the guard, travel, foodways, religion, Native American diplomacy, songs and stories, French frontier architecture, clothing, glass manufacture, and musket manufacture.
Visitors will have the opportunity to take part in hands-on programs like mounting the guard, military drill and singing a French song from the eighteenth century. The fort also presents its popular musket and artillery demonstrations throughout the day.
The first documented French presence at Niagara came in 1669. After two short-lived attempts to fortify the mouth of the river in 1679 and 1687, French engineers and workers erected a permanent structure known today as the French Castle in 1726. The French controlled Fort Niagara until 1759 when British and New York provincial forces, aided by nearly 1,000 Haudenosaunee allies, captured the fort after a 19-day siege.
Although the French occupation of the Niagara lasted just 33 years, the early explorers and soldiers left an indelible impression on the Niagara region. From place names like LaSalle to Old Fort Niagara’s original French-built structures, the French left their mark on the area.
Hours for Saturday’s program are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
More information is available by calling 716-745-7611 or on the fort’s website at www.oldfortniagara.org.