Fort Walton Beach, FL
18 pound Naval Carronade (There were actually 2 guns)
This was the principal armament for the Civil War fort from which this city derived its name. It was sent here from Fort Barrancas, Pensacola, Florida, by General Braxton Bragg, CSA, after a Confederate company, Walton Guards, 1st Florida Regiment CSA, was shelled here in 1861 by Union field artillery firing from Santa Rosa Island.
The Walton Guards converted an old Indian mound, located 200 yards southeast from here, into the earthwork of Fort Walton and mounted this cannon, a naval Carronade which fired 18 lb. shot.
The Fort was abandoned on August 26, 1861. This cannon was spiked and buried at the site of the fort.
"A button found in 1966 was attributed to a soldier of the Fort Walton Guard, commanded by Confederate Captain William McPherson. During the Civil War he used the cannon and this site to protect "The Narrows" of Santa Rosa Sound where it enters Choctawatchee Bay. At that time, the land extended several hundred yards farther into the Sound. Archeologists have suggested the height of the mound was raided by the Walton Guardsmen affording better cannon positioning. A cannon, discovered in the 1930s, was displayed on the Sound side of the Indianola Inn until 1962. the cannon was then moved to the Indian Temple Mound Museum, north of here. Three cannon balls, discovered in 2005, were used during this period. Based on their size, it is known that they were not shot from the cannon that was discovered in the 1930s. It is believed there is another cannon in this area that has not been unearthed."