 
      
      US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortars at the Tioga County Memorial
Four US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortars, Pattern 1861, are displayed surrounding the Civil War Soldiers and Sailors Memorial in Owego in Tioga County, New York. The four mortars are:
- 8-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861, cast by Cyrus Alger, registry Number 28, weight 1,026 pounds 
- 8-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861, cast by Cyrus Alger, registry Number 34, weight 1,036 pounds 
- 8-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861, cast by Cyrus Alger, registry Number 41, weight 1,033 pounds 
- 8-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861, cast by Seyfert McManus & Co., registry number 45, weight 1,036 pounds 
 
      
      US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortars in Oregon, Ohio
Two US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortars, Pattern 1861, are displayed at Willow Cemetery in Oregon, Ohio. Many thanks to friend-of-the-page Phil Spaugy for sharing the photos!
The two mortars were both cast at Fort Pitt Foundry in 1864. They bear the consecutive registry numbers 46 and 47. They are both marked as weighing 1,020 pounds, and they also both appear to be on original carriages. They flank a monument dedicated in 1882.
 
      
      8-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861, at the Mariners’ Museum
US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortar manufactured by Cyrus Alger and Company in 1862. Registry Number 7. Thomas Jackson Rodman, Inspector. 995 pounds as manufactured. Displayed at the Mariners' Museum in Newport News, Virginia
 
      
      The Cannons of the North Carolina State Capitol
A number of statues and monuments dot the grounds of the historic North Carolina State Capitol (built 1833-1840) in Raleigh, North Carolina. This post looks at the cannons which flank those statues.
The monuments cannons covered in this post are:
- The Statue of George Washington and the Edenton Cannons 
- The US Army 8-Inch Siege Mortars and the Statue of North Carolina Presidents 
- The 4-Inch Fawcett and Preston Rifle 
- The 32-Pounders of 57 Hundredweight now at Fort Fisher