Today my boss sent me down to Cape Charles on some business and on the way back I snuck some time in to make a brief visit to Fort Monroe. Scoping it out for a future cannon picture taking assault if you will.
I took a few pictures some of you might be interested in seeing.
Here's a 10" Rodman, registry number 257, weighs 14,946 pounds, cast in 1865 at Fort Pitt, Pennsylvania and was Inspected by Stephen C. Lyford.
Here's a shot of the breech with rounded sockets. From the rust and bolt holes it looks like there was some sort of scale running up the left hand side.
Here's a 10" Rodman with an 8" rifled steel sleeve.
The square "cascabel" is the head of the breech plug.
A picture of the muzzle showing the sleeve.
I didn't have time to visit the Casemate Museum, but by the entrance was a 3" Ordnance Rifle. Number 597, 816 pounds, cast in 1863, inspected by T.T.S.L. The barrel was in really rough shape.
For my next project, I'm considering making a 1/3rd scale field carriage so I can make different tubes of the same scale. I've always wondered what that long chain going from trail to cheek does. I know it's called the "brake chain," but how is it used? Wouldn't wrapping it around one wheel make the carriage pull to one side?
And here's the "Lincoln Gun", a 15" Rodman. This sucker is huge!
49,099 pounds of huge!
15 inches of huge!
Interestingly, this prototype has ratchets instead of the rounded sockets of the 10" Rodman. In later 15" guns the trunnions were moved toward the breech 1.25" to eliminate preponderance, thus making loading easier.
And here's a picture of the gun in the 1860's.