Erudite! I like it. Now there is a good read. I'm going to go back and read it again. My wife does the NY Times crossword puzzle every evening. I hope she gets stumped where I can use my newly gained knowledge to shine.
rc
Chic alors!
Up until I found this site and this forum my "cannon" endeavors were pretty much about seamless DOM tubing, bolted to John Deere pallets with fence hardware -- and noise makers for Fourth of July picnics.
I'm in Astoria Oregon . . . just down the street from Ft. Stevens which has some 10" Rodmans and the remains of WW II concrete gun emplacements.
Ahhhhhhhh, but south of here some 25 miles is "Cannon Beach" and I've discovered that the "cannon" at Cannon Beach is a Carronade.
Some 12 yr. old girl and her dad just discovered the elevation screw and breech to a second Carronade from this wreck:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannon_BeachIn 1846, a cannon from the US Navy schooner Shark washed ashore just north of Arch Cape, a few miles to the south of Elk Creek, the current Cannon Beach. The schooner was wrecked while attempting to cross the Columbia Bar, also known as the "Graveyard of the Pacific" because of the danger of the bar. The townspeople of Elk Creek renamed their town after the cannon.[7] The cannon is in the town's museum and a replica of it can be seen alongside U.S. Route 101.[8] Two more cannons, also believed to have been from the Shark, were discovered on Arch Cape over the weekend of February 16, 2008.[9]
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http://www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_021808_news_ancient_cannons_beach_uss_shark.70c94c4.htmlBy ANTONIA GIEDWOYN, kgw.com Staff
From a distance, the two cannons look like odd-shaped rocks in the salt water.
In fact, that's what Mike Petrone took them to be. However, his 12-year-old daughter Miranda noticed something unusual.
"We were looking at stumps and we saw this cool rock and ... she said, 'No, there's rust on it,' " Petrone told KGW.
Heavy surf washed up the two cannons on the Oregon coast last Saturday near Arch Cape, just south of Cannon Beach, and the discovery is garnering wide-spread attention.
Officials believe the twin cannons could be from the U.S.S. Shark, a survey schooner that sank in the Columbia River Bar in 1846.
When one of the cannons washed ashore shortly after the schooner sank, coastal residents named the area Cannon Beach.
"It's tremendously exciting to see Oregon's past pay us a visit ... It's important for people to visit the shore and see the artifacts, but in a way that protects your safety and preserves the integrity of the artifacts," said Chris Havel, spokesman for the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.
The cannons are visible at low tide.
"This could very well be an important historic site. Moving, touching, or taking parts of the cannon instantly destroys historical information that could help us understand where the cannons are from and what they mean to Oregon history," Havel said.
Historians and archaeologists are devising a plan to protect the important artifacts and study the broader area. They hope to move the cannons to a safer place later this week.
The U.S.S. Shark was the first U.S. war vessel to pass through the Straits of Magellan from east to west.
If the cannons are from the Shark, they'll likely go on display in a town museum.
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I'm getting far afield from the original thread . . . I realize that. But these Carronades are just down the road from me. I'm an historian (and a linguist in case you missed it).
Here's the cannon on the beach. I can't find pix of the "repros" at the roadside.