The Civil War required a sudden and massive mobilization of military resources. The immediate need for field artillery resulted in the use of a bewildering variety of pieces, ranging from superseded ordnance to modern experimental models imported from Great Britain. Amongst the array of Armstrongs, Blakelys, Wiards, and Whitworths, it is still possible to identify a relatively small number of makes and models of muzzle-loading cannon that served as the workhorses of the Civil War battlefield.
GUNS
As a term of art, "guns" are relatively long-barreled cannon designed
to fire projectiles with a nearly flat trajectory.
Name | Tube Length | Tube Weight | Bore Diameter | Range1 | Material |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Six-Pounder, M1841 | 60 inches | 884 pounds | 3.67 inches | 1520 yards | Bronze |
Light 12-pounder, M18572 | 66 inches | 1227 pounds | 4.62 inches | 1620 yards | Bronze |
10-pounder Parrott, M18613 | 78 inches | 890 pounds | 2.9 inches | 2000 yards | Cast Iron |
20-Pounder Parrott | 89 inches | 1750 pounds | 3.67 inches | 2100 yards | Cast Iron |
3-inch ordnance rifle | 73 inches | 816 pounds | 3.0 inches | 1850 yards | Wrought Iron |
1At five degrees of elevation
2Familiarly known as the "Napoleon". It was also referred
to as a "gun-howitzer", because it was capable of firing at a
relatively high angle, like a howitzer, but this term is not strictly
apt because it has no chamber.
3The M1863 10-pounder Parrott was slightly modified; the
bore was increased to 3.0 inches, to make its ammunition consistent
with that of the new 3-inch ordnance rifle, and the muzzle swell was
eliminated. The Parrott is easily recognizable by the reinforcing
band of wrought
iron around the breech. Although there were several other types of
cannon with similar reinforces (Wiards, Brookes, and British imports like the
various models of Blakelys) the Parrott was by far the most common.
Section of Parrotts, with a limber chest and guidon |
Napoleons, Battery H (DeGolyer's), 1st Michigan Light Artillery, Vicksburg NMP |
---|
Name | Tube Length | Tube Weight | Bore Diameter | Range1 | Material |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12-Pounder | 53 inches | 778 pounds | 4.62 inches | 1100 yards | Bronze |
24-pounder | 65 inches | 1318 pounds | 5.82 inches | 1325 yards | Bronze |
Mountain Howitzer | 37 inches | 220 pounds | 4.62 inches | 900 yards | Bronze |
1At five degrees of elevation
Early Breechloaders
As with rifling, the advantages of loading a cannon at the breech are
fairly clear, as the men serving at the front of a gun could attest.
Breechloading guns required a mechanism that was able to withstand the
strain of firing and still operate smoothly and quickly to allow the
next round to be fired. This required not only a superior material
but expert machining. The famous Whitworth was an early but
unreliable example, and its cannoneers not infrequently had to fasten
the breech closed and load it from the muzzle.
A Comment on Materials
The disadvantages of bronze as an ordnance material have just been
listed, and to them may be added its excessive weight. But bronze
had for centuries the signal advantage of toughness;
absent a serious defect in manufacture, bronze guns were reliable and
safe. Superior smelting techniques developed during the early
industrial revolution raised hopes that cast iron might be a suitable
material for guns, and there were many experiments. However, the
explosion of the Peacemaker aboard the Princeton halted the
production of iron cannon in the United States for over a decade.
Reinforcement of cast iron at the breech was an obvious solution, but
Robert Parker Parrott was the first to successfully turn out
quantities of cast iron cannon. The novelty in his method was not in
the reinforce, but in the method of attachment; the wrought iron band
was allowed to cool in place while the gun was rotated, which allowed
the reinforce to clamp on uniformly around the circumference of the
breech. The resulting guns still did burst occasionally, but could be
produced quickly and cheaply at a time when they were desperately
needed; the cost to the government was about $187, versus about $350
for its nearest rival, the wrought iron 3-inch ordnance rifle. The Parrott system became the workhorse rifle of the artillery for
the first years of the War, and continued to be produced in quantity
even after the introduction of the ordnance rifle, which was preferred
by many artillerymen. Advances in materials superseded both models
within a few years; the steel rifle, of which the Wiard is one of the
earliest examples, soon took over the field.
This Number One carriage is shown carrying a 6-pounder.
A caisson hooked to its limber; note the extra wheel at the rear and the extra limber pole slung under the caisson.