![header=[Marker Text] body=[Begun in 1755 by George Croghan, named by Governor Morris after Sir George Lyttelton, then the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Garrisoned variously by Provincial and regular troops, as well as local volunteers in 1763. By 1764 it was reported in ruins.
] sign](kora/files/1/10/1-A-86-139-ExplorePAHistory-a0a3n1-a_450.gif)
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Name:
Fort Lyttelton
Region:
Laurel Highlands/Southern Alleghenies
County:
Fulton
Marker Location:
US 522 at Fort
Dedication Date:
June 30, 1967
Behind the Marker
Fort Lyttelton (modern Fort Littletown) was one of the provincial posts built in 1755-56 to defend Pennsylvania's frontier. Like
Fort Shirley, another post built by the fur trader and Indian agent George Croghan, Fort Lyttelton was little more than a stockade hastily thrown up around some buildings, to provide refuge to colonists besieged by Indians in the violent months following
Braddock's Defeat. After the fall of Fort Granville in July 1756, it was the only post west of the Susquehanna River maintained by the provincial government.
In 1758, Fort Lyttelton was garrisoned, by British regulars marching along the
Forbes Road. In 1763, it was again occupied by colonial volunteers raised in response to
Pontiac's Rebellion. Its southerly orientation made it a base for scouting parties during the Seven Years' War, as well as a center for receiving Cherokee and other southern Indians recruited to the British cause.


In 1758, Fort Lyttelton was garrisoned, by British regulars marching along the

