Thanks, Boom J, very much for this bit of artillery news. That certainly is a great photo. So, let's see, we now have a bunch of seacoast and siege guns firing on a regular basis in the United States. There is the 1844, 8" Columbiad on the terraplein of Fort Delaware in the river and state of that name firing weekly if not more frequently during the summer. And now the Fort Macon gun near Morehead City, North Carolina, and along the southern coast of North Carolina at Fort Fisher we have an all steel reproduction of an original rifled and Banded 42 pdr. 7" seacoast gun, fired occasionally during the summer. In Ft. Pulaski, Georgia we now have a reproduction siege rifle, a 30 Pdr. Parrott. It is fired occasionally during the season. Also in the Peach Tree State, we have an original 7" Brooke Double-Banded Seacoast and Navy Rifle at the Port Columbus Civil War Naval Museum in Columbus, Georgia. A five pound black powder charge is fired occasionally during the season over the Chattahoochee River. And in Fort Zachary Taylor in Key West, Florida there is a big 10" Rodman Gun that occasionally scares the seagulls with a blast from it's casemate position, the only firing gun so situated. Recently in 2009 the state of Alabama, which administers Fort Morgan, mounted a model 1829, 32 pdr. seacoast gun on a wooden front pintle barbette carriage. On August 1, 2009 this gun, served by reinactors in Confederate uniforms, fired toward the historical position of Admiral Farragut's flag ship, Hartford where it met the CSS Tenessee, from a sandbagged water battery 25 yards north of the fort's outer works during the August 1, 2009 commemorative of the Battle of Mobile Bay. Please consult one of these forts for their firing schedule before running down there to see the seacoast guns fire.
Thanks again Boom J !
Mike and Tracy