This original 10" Rodman Gun, Model 1861, in Terry C.'s photo was inside Fort Clinch on the parade ground in December of 2005 when Mike and I visited some forts in Florida. The guide, in a period, Union, uniform, told us that they received that cannon from Fort Taylor in Key West, Florida years ago. Someone at Fort Clinch was smart enough to have six excellent replicas of this gun cast and have excellent cast iron carriages made as well. These six guns are mounted in pairs en barbette on Iron, Seacoast, Front-Pintle, Barbette, Carriages and all face North, North-East, or North-West which covers the entrance to Cumberland Sound where the Saint Mary's River meets the Atlantic Ocean. Fort Clinch is a worthwhile visit for several reasons. It never saw any battles, so it is in very good condition and it has several original Civil War cannon including an ordinance rifle. Also, it shares a very unique construction feature with only one other fort in the United States. Fort Clinch has a Carnot Wall just like Fort Gaines does on Dauphin Island guarding Mobile Bay in Alabama across from Fort Morgan. So what! What is a Carnot Wall?
From the photos below, you can see that this unique wall, located in the ditch, protects the earthen, scarp, or main outer wall of the fort from direct artillery fire and also provides for covered musketry positions through an extensive system of loop holes. Directly behind it is the Chemin-de-Ronde or continuous path-way all around the fort, even through the thick earthen traverse which contains the tunnel, pictured below, to one of the five bastions from the parade ground. This would aid essential communication during a battle and would allow reinforcements to be moved quickly wherever needed. With all these advantages, why were only 2 such forts built in the United states? In a word, FIREPOWER, or actually a LACK OF FIREPOWER!! You see, this design prevented the use of the forts most powerful guns, the 10" Rodmans during an infantry or marine assault. The backs of your defenders were only twenty-five feet in front of the seacoast gun muzzles. If you used the big guns, you would maim or kill your infantrymen with the muzzle-blast alone. Only the flank howitzers in the bastions and a single center-pintle gun on top of each bastion could be used to stop an enemy's Coup-de-Main, or quick frontal assault.
Regards,
Tracy and Mike