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Following the American Revolution , he oversaw the War Department under the Articles of Confederation from to Washington, at the start of his first administration, appointed Knox the nation's first Secretary of War , a position he held from to He is well known today as the namesake of Fort Knox in Kentucky, the repository of a large portion of the nation's gold reserves.
Born and raised in Boston , Massachusetts, Knox owned and operated a bookstore in the city, cultivating an interest in military history and joining a local artillery company. Knox was also on the scene of the Boston Massacre. Though barely 25 when the American Revolutionary War broke out in , he engineered the transport of captured artillery from New York's Fort Ticonderoga, which proved decisive in driving the British out of Boston in early Knox quickly rose to become the chief artillery officer of the Continental Army.
In this role, he accompanied Washington on most of his campaigns and was engaged in many major actions of the war. He established training centers for artillerymen and manufacturing facilities for weaponry that were valuable assets in winning the war for independence. Knox saw himself as the embodiment of revolutionary republican ideals. In early , as the war drew to a close, he initiated the concept of the Society of the Cincinnati , [ 2 ] authoring its founding document and establishing the organization as a fraternal, hereditary society of veteran officers that survives to this day.
In , the Congress of the Confederation appointed Knox as Secretary of War, where he dealt primarily with Indian affairs.
In this role he oversaw the development of coastal fortifications, worked to improve the preparedness of local militia , and directed the nation's military operations in the Northwest Indian War. He was formally responsible for the nation's relationship with the Indian population in the territories it claimed, articulating a policy that established federal government supremacy over the states in relation to Indian nations and called for treating Indian nations as sovereign.