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Soon after he found he could hurl a rock with his good right arm, man learned about trajectory—the curved path taken by a missile through the air. A baseball describes a "flat" trajectory every time the pitcher throws a hard, fast one. Youngsters tossing the ball to each other over a tall fence use "curved" or "high" trajectory. In artillery, where trajectory is equally important, there are three main types of cannon: (1) the flat trajectory gun, throwing shot at the target in relatively level flight; (2) the high trajectory mortar, whose shell will clear high obstacles and descend upon the target from above; and (3) the howitzer, an in-between piece of medium-high trajectory, combining the mobility of the fieldpiece with the large caliber of the mortar.The Spaniard, Luis Collado, mathematician, historian, native of Lebrija in Andalusia, and, in 1592, royal engineer of His Catholic Majesty's Army in Lombardy and Piedmont, defined artillery broadly as "a machine of infinite importance." Ordnance he divided into three classes, admittedly following the rules of the "German masters, who were admired above any other nation for their founding and handling of artillery." Culverins and sakers (Fig. 23a) were guns of the first class, designed to strike the enemy from long range. The battering cannon (fig. 23b) were second class pieces; they were to destroy forts and walls and dismount the enemy's machines. Third class guns fired stone balls to break and sink ships and defend batteries from assault; such guns included the pedrero, mortar, and bombard (fig. 23c,d).Collado's explanation of how the various guns were invented is perhaps naive, but nevertheless interesting: "Although the main intent of the inventors of this machine [artillery] was to fire and offend the enemy from both near and afar, since this offense must be in diverse ways it so happened that they formed various classes in this manner: they came to realize that men were not satisfied with the espingardas [small Moorish cannon], and for this reason the musket was made; and likewise the esmeril and the falconet. And although these fired longer shots, they made the demisaker. To remedy a defect of that, the sakers were made, and the demiculverins and culverins. While they were deemed sufficient for making a long shot and striking the enemy from afar, they were of little use as battering guns because they fire a small ball. So they determined to found a second kind of piece, wherewith, firing balls of much greater weight, they might realize their intention. But discovering like-wise that this second kind of piece was too powerful, heavy and costly for batteries and for defense against assaults or ships and galleys, they made a third class of piece, lighter in metal and taking less powder, to fire balls of stone. These are the commonly called cañones de pedreros. All the classes of pieces are different in range, manufacture and design. Even the method of charging them is different."
It was most important for the artillerist to understand the different classes of guns. As Collado quaintly phrased it, "he who ignores the present lecture on this arte will, I assert, never do a good thing." Cannon burst in the batteries every day because gunners were ignorant of how the gun was made and what it was meant to do. Nor was such ignorance confined to gunners alone. The will and whim of the prince who ordered the ordnance or "the simple opinion of the unexpert founder himself," were the guiding principles in gun founding. "I am forced," wrote Collado, "to persuade the princes and advise the founders that the making of artillery should always take into account the purpose each piece must serve." This persuasion he undertook in considerable detail.The first class of guns were the long-range pieces, comparatively "rich" in metal. In the following table from Collado, the calibers and ranges for most Spanish guns of this class are given, although as the second column shows, at this period calibers were standardized only in a general way. For translation where possible, and to list those which became the most popular calibers, we have added a final column. Most of the guns were probably of culverin length: 30- to 32-caliber.
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Name | Caliber (inches) |
Length | Weight of gun (pounds) |
Weight of shot (pounds) |
Powder charge (pounds) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ft. | In. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rabinet | 1.0 | 300 | 0.3 | 0.18 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Serpentine | 1.5 | 400 | .5 | .3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Falconet | 2.0 | 3 | 9 | 500 | 1.0 | .4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Falcon | 2.5 | 6 | 0 | 680 | 2.0 | 1.2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Minion | 3.5 | 6 | 6 | 1,050 | 5.2 | 3 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Saker | 3.65 | 6 | 11 | 1,400 | 6 | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Culverin bastard | 4.56 | 8 | 6 | 3,000 | 11 | 5.7 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Demiculverin | 4.0 | 3,400 | 8 | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Basilisk | 5.0 | 4,000 | 14 | 9 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Culverin | 5.2 | 10 | 11 | 4,840 | 18 | 12 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pedrero | 6.0 | 3,800 | 26 | 14 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Demicannon | 6.4 | 11 | 0 | 4,000 | 32 | 18 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bastard cannon | 7.0 | 4,500 | 42 | 20 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cannon serpentine | 7.0 | 5,500 | 42 | 25 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cannon | 8.0 | 6,000 | 60 | 27 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cannon royal | 8.54 | 8 | 6 | 8,000 | 74 | 30 |
Spanish name | Weight of ball (pounds) |
Translation |
Quarto canon | 9 to 12 | Quarter-cannon. |
Tercio canon | 16 | Third-cannon. |
Medio canon | 24 | Demicannon. |
Canon de abatir | 32 | Siege cannon. |
Doble canon | 48 | Double cannon. |
Canon de bateria | 60 | Battering cannon. |
Serpentino | Serpentine. | |
Quebrantamuro or lonbarda | 70 to 90 | Wallbreaker or lombard. |
Basilisco | 80 and up | Basilisk. |
Wall thickness in 8ths of caliber | |||
Vent | Trunnion | Chase | |
Bastard culverin | 7 | 5 | 3 |
Legitimate culverin | 8 | 5-1/2 | 3-1/2 |
Double-fortified culverin | 6-1/2 | 9 | 4 |
Wall thickness in 8ths of caliber | |||
Vent | Trunnion | Chase | |
Cañon sencillo (light cannon) | 6 | 4-1/2 | 2-1/2 |
Cañon común (common cannon) | 5 | 7 | 3-1/2 |
Canon reforzado (reinforced cannon) | 5-1/2 | 8 | 3-1/2 |
Spanish guns | Thickness of bore wall in 8ths of the caliber |
English guns | ||
Vent | Trunnions | Chase | ||
Light cannon; bell-chambered cannon | 6 | 4-1/2 | 2-1/2 | Bastard cannon. |
Demicannon | 6 | 5 | 3 | |
Common cannon; common siege cannon | 7 | 5 | 3-1/2 | |
Light culverin; common battering cannon | 7 | 5 | 3 | Bastard culverin; legitimate cannon. |
Common culverin; reinforced cannon | 8 | 5-1/2 | 3-1/2 | Legitimate culverin; double-fortified cannon. |
Legitimate culverin | 9 | 6-1/2 | 4 | Double-fortified culverin. |
Cast-iron cannon | 10 | 8 | 5 | |
Pasavolante | 11-1/2 | 8-1/2 | 5-1/2 |
Tags:
From the guns of Queen Elizabeth's time came the 6-, 9-, 12-, 18-, 24-, 32-, and 42-pounder classifications adopted by Cromwell's government and used by the English well through the eighteenth century. On the Continent, during much of this period, the French were acknowledged leaders. Louis XIV (1643-1715) brought several foreign guns into his ordnance, standardizing a set of calibers (4-, 8-, 12-, 16-, 24-, 32-, and 48-pounders) quite different from Henry II's in the previous century.The cannon of the late 1600's was an ornate masterpiece of the foundryman's art, covered with escutcheons, floral relief, scrolls, and heavy moldings, the most characteristic of which was perhaps the banded muzzle (figs. 23b-c, 25, 26a-b), that bulbous bit of ornamentation which had been popular with designers since the days of the bombards. The flared or bell-shaped muzzle (figs. 23a, 26c, 27) did not supplant the banded muzzle until the eighteenth century, and, while the flaring bell is a usual characteristic of ordnance founded between 1730 and 1830, some banded-muzzle guns were made as late as 1746 (fig. 26a).By 1750, however, design and construction were fairly well standardized in a gun of much cleaner line than the cannon of 1650. Although as yet there had been no sharp break with the older traditions, the shape and weight of the cannon in relation to the stresses of firing were becoming increasingly important to the men who did the designing.
Conditions in eighteenth century Great Britain were more or less typical: in the 1730's Surveyor-General Armstrong's formulae for gun design were hardly more than continuations of the earlier ways. His guns were about 20 calibers long, with these outside proportions:
The trunnions, about a caliber in size, were located well forward (3/7 of the gun's length) "to prevent the piece from kicking up behind" when it was fired. Gunners blamed this bucking tendency on the practice of centering the trunnions on the lower line of the bore. "But what will not people do to support an old custom let it be ever so absurd?" asked John Müller, the master gunner of Woolwich. In 1756, Müller raised the trunnions to the center of the bore, an improvement that greatly lessened the strain on the gun carriage.
The caliber of the gun continued to be the yardstick for "fortification" of the bore walls:
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Field | Ship | Siege | Garrison | |||||||||||||||
Length in calibers | 14 | 15 | 18 | 18 | ||||||||||||||
(Other proportions in 24ths of the shot diameter) | ||||||||||||||||||
Caliber | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | ||||||||||||||
Thickness of breech | 14 | 24 | 16 | 24 | ||||||||||||||
Length from breech to taper | 39 | 49 | 40 | 49 | ||||||||||||||
Thickness at vent | 16 | 25 | 18 | 25 | ||||||||||||||
Thickness at muzzle | 8 | 12-1/2 | 9 | 12-1/2 |
Caliber | Field | Ship | Siege | Garrison | ||||||
Iron | Bronze | Iron | Bronze | Iron | Bronze | Iron | Bronze | Iron | Bronze | |
1-1/2 pounder | 6'0" | |||||||||
3-pounder | 3'6" | 3'3" | 3'6" | 4'6" | 3'6" | 7'0" | 4'6" | 4'2" | ||
4-pounder | 6'0" | |||||||||
6-pounder | 4'6" | 4'1" | 8'0" | 4'4" | 7'0" | 4'4" | 8'0" | 6'6" | 5'3" | |
9-pounder | 4'8" | 5'0" | 7'0" | 5'0" | 9'0" | 7'0" | 6'0" | |||
12-pounder | 5'0" | 5'1" | 9'0" | 5'6" | 9'0" | 5'6" | 9'0" | 6'7" | 8'0" | 6'7" |
18-pounder | 5'10" | 6'4" | 9'0" | 6'4" | 9'6" | 7'6" | 9'0" | 7'6" | ||
24-pounder | 5'6" | 6'5" | 9'6" | 7'0" | 9'0" | 7'0" | 9'6" | 8'4" | 9'0" | 8'4" |
32-pounder | 7'6" | 9'6" | 7'6" | 10'0" | 9'2" | 9'6" | 9'2" | |||
36-pounder | 7'10" | 9'6" | ||||||||
42-pounder | 9'6" | 8'4" | 10'0" | 8'4" | 9'6" | 10'0" | 10'0" | |||
48-pounder | 8'6" | 8'6" | 10'6" |
Cannon for permanent fortifications were of various sizes and calibers, depending upon the terrain that had to be defended. At Castillo de San Marcos, for instance, the strongest armament was on the water front; lighter guns were on the land sector, an area naturally protected by the difficult terrain existing in the colonial period.
Before the Castillo was completed, guns were mounted only in the bastions or projecting corners of the fort. A 1683 inventory clearly shows that heaviest guns were in the San Agustín, or southeastern bastion, commanding not only the harbor and its entrance but the town of St. Augustine as well San Pablo, the northwestern bastion, overlooked the land approach to the Castillo and the town gate; and, though its armament was lighter, it was almost as numerous as that in San Agustín. Bastion San Pedro to the southwest was within the town limits, and its few light guns were a reserve for San Pablo. The watchtower bastion of San Carlos over looked the northern marshland and the harbor; its armament was likewise small. The following list details the variety and location of the ordnance:Cannon mounted at Castillo de San Marcos in 1683
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Kind of gun |
1683 |
1706 |
1740 |
1763 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Iron |
Bronze |
Iron |
Bronze |
Iron |
Bronze |
Iron |
Bronze |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
2-pounder |
1 |
.. |
.. |
+ |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
3-pounder |
.. |
1 |
.. |
+ |
2 |
3 |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
4-pounder |
1 |
1 |
* |
+ |
5 |
1 |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
5-pounder |
4 |
1 |
* |
+ |
15 |
1 |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
6-pounder |
.. |
.. |
* |
+ |
5 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
7-pounder |
4 |
1 |
* |
+ |
5 |
2 |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
8-pounder |
.. |
1 |
* |
+ |
11 |
1 |
5 |
11 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
3-1/2-in. carronade |
.. |
.. |
* |
+ |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
9-pounder |
3 |
.. |
* |
+ |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
10-pounder |
1 |
1 |
* |
+ |
.. |
.. |
6 |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
12-pounder |
1 |
1 |
.. |
+ |
.. |
.. |
13 |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
15-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
+ |
6 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
16-pounder |
3 |
.. |
.. |
+ |
.. |
.. |
2 |
1 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
18-pounder |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
4 |
1 |
7 |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
24-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
2 |
.. |
7 |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
33-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
36-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
40-pounder |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
24-pounder field howitzer |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
6-in. howitzer |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
8-in. howitzer |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Small mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
18 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
6-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
9-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
10-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Large mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
6 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Stone mortar |
2 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Total |
20 |
9 |
26 |
9 |
55 |
10 |
40 |
37 |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Grand total |
29 |
35 |
65 |
77 |
Kind of gun |
1765 |
1812 |
1834 |
|||
Iron |
Bronze |
Iron |
Bronze |
Iron |
Bronze |
|
2-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
3-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
4-pounder |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
5-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
6-pounder |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
3 |
.. |
7-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
8-pounder |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
3-1/2-in. carronade |
.. |
.. |
4 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
9-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
10-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
12-pounder |
7 |
.. |
2 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
15-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
16-pounder |
.. |
.. |
8 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
18-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
4 |
.. |
24-pounder |
32 |
.. |
10 |
.. |
5 |
.. |
33-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
36-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
40-pounder |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
24-pounder field howitzer |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
2 |
2 |
6-in. howitzer |
.. |
.. |
.. |
2 |
.. |
2 |
8-in. howitzer |
.. |
2 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
Small mortar |
.. |
20 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
6-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
1 |
9-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
10-in. mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
1 |
Large mortar |
.. |
1 |
.. |
.. |
.. |
.. |
Stone mortar |
.. |
.. |
.. |
3 |
.. |
.. |
Total |
39 |
24 |
26 |
8 |
14 |
6 |
Grand total |
63 |
34 |
20 |
*26 guns from 4- to 10- pounders.
+8 guns from 2- to 16-pounders.
Caliber | Elevation | Range in yards |
18-pounder siege and garrison | 5° 0" | 1,592 |
24-pounder siege and garrison | 5° 0" | 1,901 |
32-pounder seacoast | 5° 0" | 1,922 |
42-pounder seacoast | 5° 0" | 1,955 |
8-inch Columbiad | 27° 30" | 4,812 |
10-inch Columbiad | 39° 15" | 5,654 |
12-inch Columbiad | 39° 0" | 5,506 |
Caliber | Point-blank range in yards |
Elevation | Range in yards |
32-pounder of 42 cwt | 313 | 5° | 1,756 |
8-inch of 63 cwt | 330 | 5° | 1,770 |
IX-inch shell gun | 350 | 15° | 3,450 |
X-inch shell gun | 340 | 11° | 3,000 |
XI-inch shell gun | 295 | 15° | 2,650 |
XV-inch shell gun | 300 | 7° | 2,100 |
Caliber | Elevation | Range in yards |
20-pounder Parrott | 15° | 4,400 |
30-pounder Parrott | 25° | 6,700 |
100-pounder Parrott | 25° | 7,180 |
Cannons of the Seventeenth Century
|
Type |
Bore Size |
Gun Weight |
Shot Weight |
|
2 Pounder |
2.5 Inch |
600 lbs |
2 pounds |
3.5 pounds |
6 Pounder |
3.0 Inch |
1,000-1,500 |
6 pounds |
6 pounds |
24 Pounder |
4.5 Inch |
3,000-4,000 |
24 pounds |
14 pounds |
32 Pounder |
5.0 Inch |
4,000-5,000 |
32 pounds |
18 pounds |
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Field counterpart of the garrison cannon was the siege gun—the "battering cannon" of the old days, mounted upon a two-wheeled siege or "traveling" carriage that could be moved about in field terrain. Whereas the purpose of the garrison cannon was to destroy the attacker and his materiel, the siege cannon was intended to destroy the fort. Calibers ranged from 3- to 42-pounders in eighteenth century British tables, but the 18- and 24-pounders seem to have been the most widely used for siege operations.
The siege carriage closely resembled the field gun carriage, but was much more massive, as may be seen from these comparative figures drawn from eighteenth century British specifications:
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The field guns were the mobile pieces that could travel with the army and be brought quickly into firing position. They were lighter in weight than any other type of flat trajectory weapon. To achieve this lightness the designers had not only shortened the guns, but thinned down the bore walls. In the eighteenth century, calibers ran from the 3- to the 24-pounder, mounted on comparatively light, two-wheeled carriages. In addition, there was the 1-1/2-pounder (and sometimes the light 3- or 6-pounder) on a "gallopers' carriage—a vehicle with its trail shaped into shafts for the horse. The elevating-screw mechanism was early developed for field guns, although the heavier pieces like the 18- and 24-pounders were still elevated by quoins as late as the early 1800's.
In the Castillo collection are parts of early United States field carriages little different from Spanish carriages that held a score of 4-pounders in the long, continuous earthwork parapet surrounding St. Augustine in the eighteenth century. The Spanish mounts were a little more complicated in construction than British or American carriages, but not much. Spanish pyramid-headed nails for securing ironwork were not far different from the diamond- and rose-headed nails of the British artificer.Each piece of hardware on the carriage had its purpose. Gunner's tools were laid in hooks on the cheeks, There were bolts and rings for the lines when the gun had to be moved by manpower in the field. On the trail transom, pintle plates rimmed the hole that went over the pintle on the limber. Iron reinforced the carriage at weak points or where the wood was subject to wear. Iron axletrees were common by the late 1700's.For training the field gun, the crew used a special handspike quite different from the garrison handspike. It was a long, round staff, with an iron handle bolted to its head (fig. 33a). The trail transom of the carriage held two eyebolts, into which the foot of the spike was inserted. A lug fitted into an offset in the larger eyebolt so that the spike could not twist. With the handspike socketed in the eyebolts, lifting the trail and laying the gun was easy.The single-trail carriage (fig. 13) used so much during the middle 1800's was a remarkable simplification of carriage design. It was also essential for guns like the Parrott rifles, since the thick reinforce on the breech of an otherwise slender barrel would not fit the older twin-trail carriage. The single, solid "stock" or trail eliminated transoms, for to the sides of the stock itself were bolted short, high cheeks, humped like a camel to cradle the gun so high that great latitude in elevation was possible. The elevating screw was threaded through a nut in the stocks under the big reinforce of the gun.While the larger bore siege Parrotts were not noted for long serviceability, Parrott field rifles had very high endurance. As for performance, see the following table:
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The howitzer was invented by the Dutch in the seventeenth century to throw larger projectiles (usually bombs) than could the field pieces, in a high trajectory similar to the mortar, but from a lighter and more mobile weapon. The wide-purpose efficiency of the howitzer was appreciated al most at once, and it was soon adopted by all European armies. The weapon owed its mobility to a rugged, two-wheeled carriage like a field carriage, but with a relatively short trail that permitted the wide arc of elevation needed for this weapon.
British howitzers of the 1750's were of three calibers: 5.8-, 8-, and 10-inch, but the 10-incher was so heavy (some 50 inches long and over 3,500 pounds) that it was quickly discarded. Müller deplored the superfluous weight of these pieces and developed 6-, 8-, 10-, and 13-inch howitzers in which, by a more calculated distribution of the metal, he achieved much lighter weapons. Müller's howitzers survived in the early 6- to 10-inch pieces of United States artillery and one fine little 24-pounder of the late eighteenth century happens to be among the armament of Castillo de San Marcos, along with some early nineteenth century howitzers. The British, incidentally, were the first to bring this type gun to Florida. None appeared on the Castillo inventory until the 1760's.
In addition to the very light and therefore easily portable mountain howitzer used for Indian warfare, United States artillery of 1850 included 12-, 24-, and 32-pounder field, 24-pounder and 8-inch siege and garrison, and the 10-inch seacoast howitzer. The Navy had a 1 2-pounder heavy and a 24-pounder, to which were added the 12- and 24-pounder Dahlgren rifled boat howitzers of the Civil War period. Such guns were often used in landing operations. The following table gives some typical ranges:
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From earliest times the usefulness of the mortar as an arm of the artillery has been clearly recognized. Up until the 1800's the weapon was usually made of bronze, and many mortars had a fixed elevation of 45°, which in the sixteenth century was thought to be the proper elevation for maximum range of any cannon. In the 1750's Müller complained of the stupidity of British artillerists in continuing to use fixed-elevation mortars, and the Spanish made a mortero de plancha, or "plate" mortar (fig. 37), as late as 1788. Range for such a fixed-elevation weapon was varied by using more or less powder, as the case required. But the most useful mortar, of course, had trunnions and adjustable elevation by means of quoins.
The mortar was mounted on a "bed"—a pair of wooden cheeks held together by transoms. Since a bed had no wheels, the piece was transported on a mortar wagon or sling cart. In the battery, the mortar was generally bedded upon a level wooden platform; aboard ship, it was a revolving platform, so that the piece could be quickly aimed right or left. The mortar's weight, plus the high angle of elevation, kept it pretty well in place when it was fired, although British artillerists took the additional precaution of lashing it down.
The mortar did not use a wad, because a wad prevented the fuze of the shell from igniting. To the layman, it may seem strange that the shell was never loaded with the fuze toward the powder charge of the gun. But the fuze was always toward the muzzle and away from the blast, a practice which dated from the early days when mortars were discharged by "double firing": the gunner lit the fuze of the shell with one hand and the priming of the mortar with the other. Not until the late 1600's did the method of letting the powder blast ignite the fuze become general. It was a change that greatly simplified the use of the arm and, no doubt, caused the mortarman to heave a sigh of relief.
Most mortars were equipped with dolphins, either singly or in pairs, which were used for lifting the weapon onto its bed. Often there was a little bracketed cup—a priming pan—under the vent, a handy gadget that saved spilling a lot of powder at the almost vertical breech. As with other bronze cannon, mortars were embellished with shields, scrolls, names, and other decoration.About 1750, the French mortar had a bore length 1-1/2 diameters of the shell; in England, the bore was 2 diameters for the smaller calibers and 3 for the 10- and 13-inchers. The extra length added a great deal of weight to the British mortars: the 13-inch weighed 25 hundredweight, while the French equivalent weighed only about half that much. Müller complained that mortar designers slavishly copied what they saw in other guns. For instance, he said, the reinforce was unnecessary; it . . . overloads the Mortar with a heap of useless metal, and that in a place where the least strength is required, yet as if this unnecessary metal was not sufficient, they add a great projection at the mouth, which serves to no other purpose than to make the Mortar top-heavy. The mouldings are likewise jumbled together, without any taste or method, tho' they are taken from architecture." Field mortars in use during Müller's time included 4.6-, 5.8-, 8-, 10-, and 13-inch "land" mortars and 10- and 13-inch "sea" mortars. Muller, of course, redesigned them.
The small mortars called coehorns (fig. 39) were invented by the famed Dutch military engineer, Baron van Menno Coehoorn, and used by him in 1673 to the great discomfit of French garrisons. James Oglethorpe had many of them in his 1740 bombardment of St. Augustine when the Spanish, trying to translate coehorn into their own tongue, called them cuernos de vaca—"cow horns." They continued in use through the U.S. Civil War, and some of them may still be seen in the battlefield parks today.Bombs and carcasses were usual for mortar firing, but stone projectiles remained in use as late as 1800 for the pedrero class (fig. 43). Mortar projectiles were quite formidable; even in the sixteenth century missiles weighing 100 or more pounds were not uncommon, and the 13-inch mortar of 1860 fired a 200-pound shell. The larger projectiles had to be whipped up to the muzzle with block and tackle.
In the last century, the bronze mortars metamorphosed into the great cast-iron mortars, such as "The Dictator," that mammoth Federal piece used against Petersburg, Va. Wrought-iron beds with a pair of rollers were built for them. In spite of their high trajectory, mortars could range well over a mile, as witness these figures for United States mortars of the 1860's, firing at 45° elevation:
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"Hoist with his own petard," an ancient phrase signifying that one's carefully laid scheme has exploded, had truly graphic meaning in the old days when everybody knew what a petard was. Since the petard fired no projectile, it was hardly a gun. Roughly speaking, it was nothing but an iron bucket full of gunpowder. The petardier would hang it on a gate, something like hanging your hat on a nail, and blast the gate open by firing the charge.Small petards weighed about 50 pounds; the large ones, around 70 pounds. They had to be heavy enough to be effective, yet light enough for a couple of men to lift up handily and hang on the target. The bucket part was packed full of the powder mixture, then a 2-1/2-inch-thick board was bolted to the rim in order to keep the powder in and the air out. An iron tube fuze was screwed into a small hole in the back or side of the weapon. When all was ready, the petardiers seized the two handles of the petard and carried it to the troublesome door. Here they set a screw, hung the explosive instrument upon it, lit the fuze, and "retired."Petards were used frequently in King William's War of the 1680's to force the gates of small German towns. But on a well-barred, double gate the small petard was useless, and the great petard would break only the fore part of such a gate. Furthermore, as one would guess, hanging a petard was a hazardous occupation; it went out of style in the early 1700's. |
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Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries had its humble beginnings as an idea of a few artisans and craftsmen who enjoy performing with live steel fighting. As well as a patchwork quilt tent canvas. Most had prior military experience hence the name.
Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries.
Vendertainers that brought many things to a show and are know for helping out where ever they can.
As well as being a place where the older hand made items could be found made by them and enjoyed by all.
We expanded over the years to become well known at what we do. Now we represent over 100 artisans and craftsman that are well known in their venues and some just starting out. Some of their works have been premiered in TV, stage and movies on a regular basis.
Specializing in Medieval, Goth , Stage Film, BDFSM and Practitioner.
Patchwork Merchant Mercenaries a Dept of, Ask For IT was started by artists and former military veterans, and sword fighters, representing over 100 artisans, one who made his living traveling from fair to festival vending medieval wares. The majority of his customers are re-enactors, SCAdians and the like, looking to build their kit with period clothing, feast gear, adornments, etc.
Likewise, it is typical for these history-lovers to peruse the tent (aka mobile store front) and, upon finding something that pleases the eye, ask "Is this period?"
A deceitful query!! This is not a yes or no question. One must have a damn good understanding of European history (at least) from the fall of Rome to the mid-1600's to properly answer. Taking into account, also, the culture in which the querent is dressed is vitally important. You see, though it may be well within medieval period, it would be strange to see a Viking wearing a Caftan...or is it?
After a festival's time of answering weighty questions such as these, I'd sleep like a log! Only a mad man could possibly remember the place and time for each piece of kitchen ware, weaponry, cloth, and chain within a span of 1,000 years!! Surely there must be an easier way, a place where he could post all this knowledge...
Traveling Within The World is meant to be such a place. A place for all of these artists to keep in touch and directly interact with their fellow geeks and re-enactment hobbyists, their clientele.
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