Brierfield Arsenal 6-Pounder at Petersburg
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

Brierfield Arsenal 6-Pounder at Petersburg

A 6-Pounder smoothbore manufactured by Brierfield Arsenal in Alabama (near Selma) in 1863 is displayed at Petersburg National Battlefield. This is the only surviving cannon produced by Brierfield. A large "C.S." is visible on top of the tube above the trunnions. The weight, 982 pounds, is stamped on the muzzle.

Read More
8-Inch Confederate Columbiad in Waterman, Illinois
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

8-Inch Confederate Columbiad in Waterman, Illinois

An 8-Inch Confederate Columbiad is displayed in Johnson Grove Cemetery near Waterman, Illinois. It sits atop a pedestal bearing the inscriptions “Dedicated to the Soldiers of the Civil War” and “Erected 1905.”

The left trunnion bears the mark “1864” - probably for the date of acceptance into service. The Tredegar Foundry number on the muzzle - “1947” - actually corresponds to a casting date of October 27th, 1863 in the records of Tredegar Iron Works of Richmond, Virginia.

Read More
8-Inch Confederate Columbiads in St. Augustine, Florida
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

8-Inch Confederate Columbiads in St. Augustine, Florida

Two 8-Inch Confederate Columbiads cast by Bellona Foundry in 1861 are displayed in the Plaza de la Constitución in Saint Augustine, Florida. Bellona’s registry numbers “27” and “29” are stamped on the muzzle. Their weight as manufactured, 8,750 pounds, is stamped on the breech of each. The bronze plaques with each cannon claim that these cannons were present at Fort Marion (Castillo de San Marcos).

Read More
10-Inch Confederate Columbiad in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

10-Inch Confederate Columbiad in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

A 10-Inch Confederate Columbiad manufactured in 1863 by Tredegar is displayed in front of the Horse Soldier in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. This cannon bears Tredegar’s registry number “1873” on its muzzle. This number corresponds to a 10-Inch Columbiad cast at Tredegar on July 30th, 1863.

Many thanks to friend-of-the-page and historian Tom Nank for taking these photos and sharing them with me.

Read More
US Navy 100-Pounder Parrott Rifles of Reynoldsville, Pennsylvania
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

US Navy 100-Pounder Parrott Rifles of Reynoldsville, Pennsylvania

Two US Navy 100-Pounder (6.4-Inch) Parrott Rifles are displayed at Veterans Memorial Park in Reynoldsville, Pennsylvania. The two cannons are displayed on iron display stands. One or perhaps both of these Parrotts may have been used in action by the US Navy against the ironclad ram CSS Albemarle during the Battle of Albemarle Sound on May 5th, 1864.

Read More
3.3-Inch Parrott Rifle in Kingstree, South Carolina
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

3.3-Inch Parrott Rifle in Kingstree, South Carolina

3.3-Inch Parrott Rifle displayed beside the Williamsburg County Courthouse in Kingstree, South Carolina. As Hazlett et al. note, this is one of three surviving 3.3-Inch Parrotts. (One of the others is at The Citadel in Charleston while the third is at Harpers Ferry.) Also according to Hazlett, these rifles externally conform to the size an shape of a US Army 10-Pounder Parrott.

Read More
US Army 10-Inch Seacoast Mortar, Pattern 1861 in St. Augustine, Florida
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

US Army 10-Inch Seacoast Mortar, Pattern 1861 in St. Augustine, Florida

US Army 10-Inch Seacoast Mortar, Pattern 1861, displayed in St. Augustine, Florida. Manufactured by Cyrus Alger & Co. in 1862, this is one of only eight of the type made - of which two survive. It strongly resembles its 13-Inch “big brother” but weighs only 7,640 pounds verses around 17,000 pounds for the 13-inch. It is considerably larger than the 10-Inch Siege Mortar, Pattern 1861 which weighed slightly less than 2,000 pounds.

Read More
The Treadwell 32-Pounders at the Washington Navy Yard
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The Treadwell 32-Pounders at the Washington Navy Yard

Two experimental wrought-iron (possibly wrought-iron and steel) 32-Pounders designed by Daniel Treadwell and manufactured circa 1844 are displayed at the Washington Navy Yard. They cannons were light and could be very strong - though not every example's welds held up. For naval service, they were too light.

Read More
The 8-Inch Rodman Rifles on US Navy Carriages at Palisades Park
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The 8-Inch Rodman Rifles on US Navy Carriages at Palisades Park

Two US Army 8-Inch Rifles which were converted from 10-Inch Rodmans in 1885 and 1886 are displayed at Palisades Park in Santa Monica, California. They were installed at the park in 1908

Intriguingly they are mounted on US Navy Carriages intended for the 8-Inch Rifle which was a similar conversion of the 11-Inch Dahlgren.

Read More
The 68-Pounder 95 Hundredweight Gun in Warrnambool, Victoria
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The 68-Pounder 95 Hundredweight Gun in Warrnambool, Victoria

A 68-Pounder 95 Hundredweight Smoothbore Muzzleloading Gun is displayed outside the Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village in Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia. Many thanks to friend-of-the-page Ivan Dove for taking these photos and sharing them with me.

Read More
The French 36-Pounder of the American Privateer General Armstrong
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The French 36-Pounder of the American Privateer General Armstrong

A French 36-Pounder is displayed in the National Museum of the United States Navy (photographed August of 2024). This cannon is a relic of a the "Battle of Fayal" between the American Privateer General Armstrong and the boats of a British squadron as well as the brig-sloop HMS Carnation.

Read More
3-Inch Quimby and Robinson Rifles at Petersburg
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

3-Inch Quimby and Robinson Rifles at Petersburg

A Quimby and Robinson 3-Inch Bronze Rifle is seen at Battery 8 at Petersburg. Quimby and Robinson of Memphis, Tennessee delivered at least 77 field pieces and siege guns to the Confederacy between November 1861 and the fall of Memphis to the US Navy in June 1862. Four of these were 3-Inch Bronze Rifles. Two of these are displayed at Petersburg.

Read More
US Army 42-Pounder, Pattern 1845, at the Washington Navy Yard
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

US Army 42-Pounder, Pattern 1845, at the Washington Navy Yard

This US Army 42-Pounder, Pattern of 1845, is displayed at the Washington Navy Yard. It was cast at Bellona Foundry in 1860, and it is marked on the breech as weighing 8,590 pounds as cast. An inscription on the top of the tube notes that it was captured by the Navy from a "Rebel Battery Battery on the Potomac River in July of 1862."

Read More
The 7-Inch Blakely of CSS Alabama
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The 7-Inch Blakely of CSS Alabama

CSS Alabama carried two heavy pivot guns: a 68-Pounder Smoothbore and a 7-Inch (or 110-Pounder) Blakely Rifle as well as six 32-pounder broadside guns. The Blakely was recovered from her wreck in 1994 and is displayed at La Cité de la Mer Museum and Aquarium in Cherbourg, France. The cannon is displayed above the remains of its original wooden carriage and with other artifacts related to the ship.

Read More
The 6.25-Inch Rifle of CSS Florida at the Washington Navy Yard
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The 6.25-Inch Rifle of CSS Florida at the Washington Navy Yard

A British manufactured 6.25-Inch Rifle captured aboard CSS Florida is displayed at the Washington Navy Yard. According to John C. Reilly's "The Iron Guns of Williard Park", the breech is engraved with the words "32-Pdr Rifled from Anglo-Rebel Pirate Florida." The left trunnion is stamped "Low Moor, 10666".

Read More
The 8-Inch Confederate Columbiad at Drewry’s Bluff
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

The 8-Inch Confederate Columbiad at Drewry’s Bluff

An 8-Inch Confederate Columbiad is displayed at Fort Darling at Drewry's Bluff on the James River near Richmond, Virginia. The Columbiad, Number 66, was cast at Bellona Foundry in 1862. The Columbiad, mounted on the commanding position overlooking the James, represents the battery which fought USS Galena and USS Monitor on May 15th, 1862.

Read More
12-Pounder Confederate Napoleon at the American Civil War Museum in Richmond
Santee1821 . Santee1821 .

12-Pounder Confederate Napoleon at the American Civil War Museum in Richmond

A 12-Pounder Confederate Napoleon is displayed in front of the American Civil War Museum in Richmond, Virginia. The “Confederate Napoleon”, a bronze smoothbore gun-howitzer, is designed to fire the same shot, shell, canister, and case as the US Army 12-Pounder Napoleon (Pattern 1857). However, given the pressures on Southern industry, most Confederate Napoleons lack the the visual refinements of the US Army model. The Confederate Napoleon typically does not have any muzzle swell. The tube likely was turned on a lathe only enough to function, so it will have a rough appearance. This particular example was cast at Tredegar Foundry - the site of the museum where it is presently displayed.

Read More