You guys are on the right track with the foundry operation, although the learning curve will be considerable. If you want to make a pattern for the mortar pictured in the line drawing posted by DD, then you need to order the "10-Inch Seacoast Mortar, Model 1844" drawing from Antique Ordinance Publishers. Actually, what you are getting is the 1840 Model, 10" Seacoast Mortar which evolved very quickly from the Model 1839, after only one '39 was built. It's not a Model 1841, like Wikipedia claims, either. There were 33 built from 1840 to 1861 and five survive today. Wayne Stark wrote in
The Big Guns, Civil War Siege, Seacoast and Naval Cannon that although Laidley identified the 10-inch seacoast mortar as a Model of 1844, neither a break in the registry number sequence, nor a significant weight difference exists among the 33 of this model produced. All five survivors were produced by the West Point Foundry and Registry No. 2 was produced in 1842 which is really hard to do if you follow Laidley's I.D. (Model 1844)!. The remainder of survivors,(4), were made in 1861, the last year of production for the Pattern 1840, 10" Seacoast Mortar.
The Big Guns authors suspect the 1844 was a typographical error or scrivener, rather than a model change.
Anyway if you want to see one labeled correctly you can always go this link:
www.cwartillery.org/ve/mortar.html If you want to see the famous, historical photo of these guns being emplaced at Butler's Crows Nest near Dutch Gap, Virginia, you can go to Wikipedia and do a search under "Siege Artillery in the Civil War". Scroll down to the second main photo section labeled
Siege Mortar Photo Gallery. Look at those huge radiuses along the bottom edges. Only casting will produce those without burning up lots of end mills OR
very fancy welding. Dig those books out and buy one on Cupolas too. Let us know when you are going to fire it up! Hope you guys are on good terms with your neighbors; a ten inch Cupola Furnace can be heard from a mile away! If you run one at night you will know what a volcano looks like close-up.
Keep us posted!
Mike and Tracy