Fort Duchesne was established by Major Frederick William Benteen on
20 August 1886, on a site selected by General George Crook, and General
Crook soon took command of the new fort. Construction began in October
1886 and the reservation was officially designated by President Cleveland
in September 1887. The fort continued to serve, with an average detachment
of 250 men, until its closure in September 1912. Remnants of the fort
still exist.
Fort Duchesne was established to replace Fort Thornburgh in the Uinta
Basin, which had been abandoned by the U.S. Army during the winter
of 1884-85. An outbreak of inter-band warfare among the Utes during
the winter of 1885-86 once more raised the question of placing a fort
in the basin. The Department of the Interior and the War Department
each sent investigators to the area who recommended the establishment
of a permanent fort. Crook selected the site in August 1886; it was
three miles above the junction of the *Uintah and Duchesne rivers and
midway between the Whiterocks agency and Ouray agency headquarters.