CW,
As I understand it, the U.S. Navy did keep accurate records on the service of their 13-inch mortars while the U.S. Army either didn't keep records of this type, or the records have yet to be discovered, and to make tracing the service history of these mortars even more difficult the two military branches sometimes shared this ordnance.
God bless the Paulson Bros.; thanks for posting the pic Norm, that's a fine shot.
These two quotes are on a marker that's placed next to a 13-inch Seacoast Mortar at Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn, NY.
"‘These mortar shells were the most disgusting, low-lived things imaginable,"
W.W. Blackford, a Confederate Engineer.
“Old veterans never forget the noise those missiles made as they went up and down like an excited bird, their shrieks becoming shriller and shriller, as the time to explode approached.”
Unknown Georgia infantryman
Talk about being ungrateful; well there's no accounting for tastes, I guess these two gentlemen just didn't care for the 200+ pound gifts being presented to them via airmail. Now, you Southern fellows don't get nasty, this was only a jest.