A Brief History of Fort Macon

and Cape Lookout Military Reservation

(1834 - 1903, 1941 - 1945)

Earlier forts were located here, including: Fort Dobbs (1756), which was never completed, and Fort Hampton (1809). The sites of both eventually eroded into the sea. The current fort was one of only three masonry forts in the state before the Civil War. The Confederates held it from 1861 to 1862. The fort was used as a federal prison from 1865 to 1876. A temporary battery was set up on the parapet in 1898. This was the second state park in North Carolina (1924). It was restored in 1935. The Army regained the use of the fort in WWII, and demolished almost every new structure prior to handing it back to the state after the war. At Cape Lookout was Fort Hancock (1778 - 1780). It was built by the French to protect their ships in Lookout Bight. It was later dismantled.

TEMPORARY HARBOR DEFENSES of BEAUFORT INLET
These defenses were under the command of the Chesapeake Bay Sector, based at Fort Monroe, Hampton, Virginia. On the beach at Ft. Macon during World War II was Battery Macon, which had four 155mm GPF guns (1941-1942) in revetments and two 6-inch naval guns (1942-1944) on concrete mounts. It is now buried in the surf. Two 75mm field guns were emplaced on Bogue Point in 1941. Two mobile 90mm guns were emplaced on Bogue Point (1944-1945) near the rock jetty, as an examination battery. Battery Atlantic Beach (1941-1942), four 155mm GPF guns in revetments, was located two and a half miles west in Atlantic Beach, almost due south of Camp Glenn in Morehead City. Two guns were later sent to Cape Lookout. There was a concrete CRF observation post and plotting room (now in ruins) behind Battery Macon, another observation post by Battery Atlantic Beach, and a Harbor Entrance Control Post (dismantled after the war) on the parapet of Fort Macon. Another observation post was located on Shackleford Banks, on the western side by the inlet, and another about two miles west of Battery Atlantic Beach on Bogue Banks. There were seven searchlight positions from Atlantic Beach to Cape Lookout Point.

At Cape Lookout was Battery Cape Lookout which had two 155mm GPF guns (1942) in revetments, and later two 5-inch naval guns (1942-1944) on concrete mounts. That battery is now in the surf near the old Coast Guard Station. An SCR-296A radar tower was in the dunes in front of the Coast Guard Station, and a wooden Battery Commander's tower was on the shore behind the battery (concrete foundation still exists). Observation posts were located on Shackleford Banks near Bald Hill Bay, and on South Core Banks about four miles northeast of the Lighthouse. A Naval Radio Compass tower was 340 yards west of the SCR-296A radar tower. There were four 75mm guns (1941-1943) in field emplacements around the Coast Guard Station. Lookout Bight was a mined and net-protected safe anchorage for allied merchant ships until 1944.

{see "American Seacoast Defenses" 2nd Ed. page 190 for 155mm, page 194 for 5-inch and 6-inch,
and page 250 for mobile 90mm mentioned in the text above.}

macon

cape
Satellite Images of Fort Macon and Cape Lookout
courtesy of Microsoft TerraServer

Proceed to Photo Gallery

* Official Link to Fort Macon State Park *
* Official Link to Cape Lookout National Seashore *

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