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,„„„, „.,,,,J till • I ' • ' • ' •• ' II • ' ' » ' J J r ' HEADQUARTERS y . . ' , y z-vyc-xx ;- 7V y. - ' ' -r y. ■ Xx - - x-yVTv T % dated HE death of the garrison resulted in the mov- ing and rebuilding of the arsenal buildings on the present site of Augusta College. The 70-acre tract was bought by Act of Congress, May 26, 1826, from Freeman Walker. The land was part of the Bellevue tract in the village of Summerville. One acre was excluded as a grave- yard for the Walker family. The G overnment paid $6,000.00 and received a deed dated November 9, 1826. There were two houses on the land, one called Bellevue (which is still standing), and the other build- ing was marked on a plat as Mrs. Walker ' s house, but no reference as to which Mrs. Walker. After the purchase of the Walker site, some of the arsenal buildings were moved from the Savannah River place, and other new buildings were con- structed. Initially the buildings moved and rebuilt, as well as some new additions, were: Headquarters (now the Administration building), two magnificent sets of officer ' s quarters, a barracks building, and a con- necting thick brick loopholed wall. The loopholes were to be used in the event of attack by invaders. There was an arched sally port under the middle of the Headquarters buildi.ig,- heavy wooden gates per- mitted access to the enclosure within the brick wall, and a wooden picket fence was set all around the place as a boundary. Water was supplied from a deep well. Years later a wooden-pipe line for sewer and water was laid and connected to Augusta ' s sys- tem. When the old wooden pipes were dug up to make way for the modern supply lines, workmen found unidentified human bones. The bones were buried in the military cemetery and marked Un- known. During the first several decades of the Nineteenth century, soldiers from the arsenal, with members of the Richmond Blues, a local home guard, fought against the enemy in the Seminole and Creek Indian wars to the south. In addition to training fighting men, the arsenal stored, repaired and cleaned guns and issued supplies to troops, including Charleston Depot, Mount Vernon and Apalachicola arsenals, Gary ' s Ferry Depot, and the Ordnance at Tampa Bay.
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