2017 George Rogers Clark National Historical Park Quarter Fortieth in the America the Beautiful Quarters Collection
George Rogers
Clark National Historical Park commemorates the American victory over the
British at Fort Sackville in southwestern Indiana during the American
Revolution on February 25, 1779. George Rogers Clark led the Americans on a
grueling mid-winter march of over 150 miles to the fort at Vincennes next to
the Wabash River. For much of the journey, Clark’s men waded through areas
flooded with icy water.
Clark’s capture
of the fort was one of the most significant events of the American Revolution,
since it struck at the heart of the British occupation of the American Midwest.
By defeating the British, Clark restricted the British influence in the
frontier lands and bolstered U.S. claims to what became the Northwest Territory
(Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota).
The George
Rogers Clark Memorial, which was dedicated in 1936, is the largest federal
monument outside of Washington, D.C. It features a bronze statue of Clark by
Hermon A. MacNeil and seven 28-foot-tall murals by Ezra Winter that honor
Clark’s capture of the fort and its importance to American history.
The reverse of
the 2017 George Rogers Clark National Historical Park Quarter features Clark
leading his men to Fort Sackville. They are wading through the flooded plains
around the fort, with muskets at the ready. This is the Denver Minted, uncirculated quarter in a capsule.
2017 George Rogers Clark National Historical Park - Denver Mint - Uncirculated
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