Thanks for the information, Starr.
Do you know how many, and which of the Alabama’s eight guns have been recovered to date?
From information that I’ve been able to gather (and as usual, some contradictory) three of the guns are now in the U.S.; one of the 32-pdr older British naval pattern guns is on long-term loan to the Museum of Mobile in Alabama, one of the Fawcett, Preston Co. 1862 contemporary design 32-pounders remains at the Charleston, SC lab where it was conserved, with hopes of eventually displaying it at the planned CSS Hunley Museum, and another of the newer model 32-pdrs is being stored in the Naval History and Heritage Command laboratory warehouse at the Washington Navy Yard.
I know that the Blakely 7-inch rifled gun was the first gun raised in June of 1994; do you know if France still has possession of this gun?
According to the following photo and caption, the 68-pounder smoothbore aft pivot gun was raised in July of 2005; do you know the present location of this gun?
I realize that these questions don't directly relate to your research on Blakely, but I figured that you might have garnered some current information on these guns while on your journey.
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A cannon from the Confederate sea raider CSS Alabama rests on a dock in France after being recovered from the bottom of the English Channel off the coast of France in this July 2005 photo provided by Gordon Watts. The 7,000-pound main battery pivot gun is the largest artifact ever retrieved from the site where the Alabama was sunk by a Union warship June 19, 1864. (AP/Press-Register)