{{Short description|Former fort in New York City's Central Park}} {{More citations needed|date=February 2021}} thumb|left|Fort Fish on right in 1816 thumb|300px|Manhattanville forts<ref name=Lossing>{{Cite book |last=Lossing |first=Benson |title=The Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812 |publisher=Harper & Brothers, Publishers |year=1868 |page=972}}</ref> thumb|300px|Fort Fish<ref name=Lossing/>{{rp|974}} {{Central Park map}} '''Fort Fish''' was an earthworks fortification within what is now Central Park, Manhattan, New York City. The fort was located on East Drive near 105th Street, directly across from the Central Park Conservancy's composting area, which was once a girls' school. Currently the only memorial on the Fort Fish site is a white marble bench dedicated to the memory of Andrew Haswell Green, the 19th century educator and city planner.<ref>Online page about the {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20021025162910/http://www.centralpark2000.com/database/bench_a_h_green.html bench]}}.</ref>

The fort was named for Nicholas Fish, chairman of New York's Committee of Defense during the War of 1812. (He was also father of U.S. Senator and Secretary of State Hamilton Fish). Only Blockhouse No. 1 remains of the system of defense.

Fort Fish was the southern extremity of a complex of forts built along a portion of the Old Post Road, or Kingsbridge Road (now East Drive in Central Park), a region formerly known as McGowan's Pass. According to a 1905 local history, the Fort Fish site is "at an elevation of 89 feet above tide-water," making it the highest point in the northeast quadrant of Central Park.<ref>Edward Hagaman Hall, McGown's Pass and Its Vicinity. 1905.</ref>

==See also== * Nutter's Battery * Fort Clinton (Central Park)

== References == {{Reflist}}

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Category:Forts in Manhattan Category:1814 establishments in New York (state) Category:History of Manhattan Category:Central Park

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