• Named an America 250 Must-See Landmark
    by USA TODAY 10Best
    Your Adventure Awaits

  • Recognized by Fodor’s as a Best Place to
    Celebrate America’s 250th
    Your Adventure Awaits

  • Highlighted by Smithsonian Magazine for America 250 Historical Reenactments Your Adventure Awaits

  • One Destination,
    Endless Adventures
    Your Adventure Awaits
    at Fort Ticonderoga

Welcome!

Experience the blend of history and natural beauty like nowhere else when you visit Fort Ticonderoga! Explore 2000 acres of America’s most historic landscape located on the shores of Lake Champlain and nestled between New York’s Adirondack and Vermont’s Green Mountains. Create lasting memories as you embark on an adventure that spans centuries, defined a continent, and helped forge a nation.

You'll Discover More At Ticonderoga

EXPLORE THE 6-ACRE HEROIC CORN MAZE!

Share time with family and friends while exploring a unique corn maze located on the shores of Lake Champlain at Fort Ticonderoga, with a NEW DESIGN for 2026! Getting lost in this life-size puzzle is part of the fun as you look for history clues among towering stalks of corn! Find clues connected to our story as you navigate the maze!

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Hear about upcoming events, and learn about our epic story and world renowed collections by signing up for our newsletter.

See What's Happening at Ticonderoga All Upcoming Events

  • June

    13

    Scots Day at Fort Ticonderoga

    Discover the heroic stories of Scottish soldiers in the British Army serving at Ticonderoga and North America through the campaigns of the 18th century. Thrill at musket demonstrations that highlight the equipment, clothing, and tactics of the red-coated Scottish soldier, during the defining military campaigns that shaped North America. Merchants selling kilts, crafts, and other […]

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  • June

    14

    Virtual Author Series featuring Kenneth Scarlett

    The Fort Ticonderoga Author Series features presentations by authors of books related to Fort Ticonderoga’s history. The program takes place virtually at 2pm ET. The last 14 months of the American Revolution, the final phase after Yorktown, were crucial for the declared “United States” to achieve their collective and sovereign independence. This groundbreaking, updated history […]

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  • June

    19

    History Happy Hour on Lake Champlain

    Cap off your day with a relaxing narrated cruise, surrounded by scenic beauty and Ticonderoga’s rich maritime history aboard the Carillon, Fort Ticonderoga’s classic 1920s tour boat. From poignant to comical, discover the drama that surrounded Ticonderoga on the storied waters of Lake Champlain. Enjoy the flavor of history through classic cocktails, taken from tales […]

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  • June

    26

    History Happy Hour on Lake Champlain

    Cap off your day with a relaxing narrated cruise, surrounded by scenic beauty and Ticonderoga’s rich maritime history aboard the Carillon, Fort Ticonderoga’s classic 1920s tour boat. From poignant to comical, discover the drama that surrounded Ticonderoga on the storied waters of Lake Champlain. Enjoy the flavor of history through classic cocktails, taken from tales […]

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  • July

    2

    Ticonderoga Guns by Night

    The flash of musketry and roar of cannon fire by night will captivate you in this unique tour and demonstrations of 18th-century firepower. The program concludes with a dramatic demonstration of weapons that you will not see anywhere else!

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  • July

    3–5

    REAL TIME REVOLUTION® Signature Reenactment Event: Return of an Army

    Fort Ticonderoga will celebrate the 250th anniversary of Independence Day with a three-day reenactment event on July 3-5, recreating the Northern Continental Army’s preparations to defend its new nation, as the Declaration of Independence was signed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. While delegates of the Continental Congress were putting pen to paper, declaring independence from British rule, […]

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  • July

    3

    History Happy Hour on Lake Champlain

    Cap off your day with a relaxing narrated cruise, surrounded by scenic beauty and Ticonderoga’s rich maritime history aboard the Carillon, Fort Ticonderoga’s classic 1920s tour boat. From poignant to comical, discover the drama that surrounded Ticonderoga on the storied waters of Lake Champlain. Enjoy the flavor of history through classic cocktails, taken from tales […]

    See More
  • July

    7

    Ticonderoga’s Treasures of 1776

    Step beyond the galleries for a rare, Curator-led experience at Fort Ticonderoga’s Thompson-Pell Research Center. Come face-to-face with original artifacts from this critical year of the Revolutionary War. Explore the dramatic moments and larger-than-life personalities connected to Ticonderoga, including Benedict Arnold, Horatio Gates, and Anthony Wayne. This behind-the-scenes tour brings the decisions, tensions, and turning […]

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  • July

    7

    “Achievements Immortalized in Song”

    NEW for 2026! Take a musical tour through the American Revolution through a live, interactive performance of classic tavern songs and folk tunes. Discover how Americans recycled popular melodies, adding political and patriotic lyrics as a struggle for rights as British subjects became a fight to be recognized among the nations of the world in […]

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  • July

    8

    A Guided Tour of Fort Ticonderoga’s Liberty Hill

    NEW! In July 1776, Continental soldiers began digging in at Ticonderoga as they prepared to stem a British counterattack. On the Heights of Carillon, a brigade of Pennsylvanians set up camp on the site of the bloodiest battle of the 18th century. Reinforcing the “old French lines” Americans believed history might repeat itself as they prepared […]

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  • July

    9

    Ticonderoga Guns by Night

    The flash of musketry and roar of cannon fire by night will captivate you in this unique tour and demonstrations of 18th-century firepower. The program concludes with a dramatic demonstration of weapons that you will not see anywhere else!

    See More
  • July

    10

    Cannon & Coffee

    Explore Fort Ticonderoga’s world-class collection of 18th century artillery from a whole new perspective and be the first to enter Fort Ticonderoga with this special early bird program. Join Curator Dr. Matthew Keagle for a special tour across the guns of Ticonderoga and learn the surprising histories of the museum’s artillery collection, spanning the Atlantic […]

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All Upcoming Events

About Fort Ticonderoga

Welcoming visitors since 1909, Fort Ticonderoga is a major cultural destination, museum, historic site, and center for learning. As a multi-day destination and the premier place to learn more about North America’s military heritage, Fort Ticonderoga engages more than 70,000 visitors each year with an economic impact of more than $16 million annually. Presenting vibrant programs, historic interpretation, boat cruises, tours, demonstrations, and exhibits, Fort Ticonderoga and is open for daily visitation May through October and special programs during Winter Quarters, November through April. Fort Ticonderoga is owned by The Fort Ticonderoga Association, a 501c3 non-profit educational organization, and is supported in part through generous donations and with some general operating support made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts. To view Fort Ticonderoga’s electronic press kit, click here. © The Fort Ticonderoga Association. 2025 All Rights Reserved.
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On June 6, 1776—250 years ago today—the situation in Canada was in such upheaval that when General Philip Schuyler wrote to the army in the field, he could not be entirely sure who the recipient would be. After the siege of Quebec was broken in early May, the army had begun a chaotic retreat. American reinforcements, including a new commander, Major General John Thomas, had arrived in Canada just in time to join the retreat; many of them promptly caught smallpox. 

For Schuyler, the commander of the Northern Department, keeping track of a situation in flux hundreds of miles to the north cannot have been easy. However, communicating with the Canadian army was vital, especially since their retreat would lead them to Fort Crown Point and Ticonderoga. Schuyler addressed his letter to “The Honble General Thomas or Officer commanding in Canada”, trying to ensure that his requests reached someone who could carry them out. 

Schuyler hoped that the retreating army could bring vital supplies along with it: “I again beg Leave to repeat the Necessity of securing all the Nails you possibly can… and all the Goods you can, as we begin sensibly to feel the want of a variety of articles.” Schuyler was also aware of the possibility that the British would follow the Americans south into New York. To hinder their plans and make it more difficult for them to build a fleet on Lake Champlain, he recommended that “If any Timber plank or Boards are any where in the Country… I think they ought to be destroyed… Saw Mills too should be rendered useless”.

Schuyler’s caution in his address line was well-founded. General Thomas had died on June 2, another victim of the army’s smallpox epidemic. General William Thompson was the next senior officer and would have assumed command but had been captured after the Battle of Trois-Rivieres on June 8, likely before this letter reached camp. The letter was probably forwarded to yet another new commander, General John Sullivan, who took up the baton and organized the American retreat.

Learn more about this letter (object ID MS.2001.0010.001) on the Ticonderoga Online Collections database: https://fortticonderoga.catalogaccess.com/archives/29416
She was a Patriot poet. He was a British officer. Learn about the incredible relationship of Jacob and Hannah Schieffelin through several objects in our newest exhibit (and behind-the-scenes video)!

Born in Philadelphia, Jacob Schieffelin’s family moved to Montreal in 1760. As the Revolutionary War began Jacob moved to Detroit, serving as a Loyalist officer in the Detroit Volunteers. In 1778, Schieffelin was deployed to Fort Sackville in Vincennes, Indiana. He was captured with the British garrison in 1779 and forced on an arduous march to Williamsburg, Virginia. In 1780, after seven months of confinement, he escaped and eventually got to British-held New York. 

Jacob was quartered with a Quaker family whose oldest daughter Hannah Lawrence was a poet and advocate for the American cause. However unlikely the pair was, they fell in love and were married against her parents’ wishes. 

�The following month, the Schieffelins began a remarkable journey back to Detroit in the middle of the war. Following the peace, they ultimately returned to New York in 1794. Now a citizen of the nation he had fought against, Schieffelin took up his in-laws' apothecary business until his death in 1835. 

Watch our newest video with curator Dr. Matthew Keagle and Exhibit Designer & Fabricator T.J. Mullen, and be sure to see these incredible objects in person in A Revolutionary Anthology: Revolutionary Possibilities, on view through October 25, 2026!

Vidoe link in bio🔗🎬
Today on Trades Tuesday we are sewing a Canada cap, the warm hat that became of a symbol of America's northern neighbors in 1776. Our reconstruction of this cap requires work with fur, piecing the crown together with glovers' needles. Within, we sew a crown of fine red cloth and a lining of glazed linen. As American soldiers departed Ticonderoga in late 1776, many took these caps with them, bringing this Canadian style to the crossing of the Delaware and a host of battles to the south.

#TradesTuesday #REALTIMEREVOLUTION #America250
For a limited time, July-August 2, Fort Ticonderoga will display one of its most significant objects: Benjamin Warner’s Knapsack. Carried by Revolutionary War soldier Benjamin Warner and handed down to his descendants, the knapsack has survived with a call to future generations to defend America’s hard-won liberty against all threats.

The 250-year-old knapsack, made of painted linen, was carried by Benjamin Warner of New Haven, Connecticut, during service in the Revolutionary War that took him to Boston, Quebec, New York and elsewhere over his years in the ranks. Later in life, Warner left it to his son as a memento of his service and a reminder of what he fought for, writing:

“This Napsack I caryd (sic) Through the War of the Revolution to achieve the American Independence. I Transmit it to my olest sone (sic) Benjamin Warner Jr. with directions to keep it…and whilst one shred of it shall remain never surrender you libertys to a foren envador or an aspiring demegog (sic).”

The letter is signed, “Benjamin Warner Ticonderoga March 27, 1837.” Both the knapsack and its note are carefully preserved in the collection at Fort Ticonderoga where they have resided for almost a century but have not been on display for over a decade.

READ MORE: https://fortticonderoga.org/news/fort-ticonderoga-honors-250th-anniversary-of-american-independence-with-special-exhibit-highlighting-soldiers-knapsack-and-its-powerful-message/