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M1841 6-pounder field gun

The M1841 6-pounder field gun was a bronze smoothbore muzzleloading cannon that was adopted by the United States Army in 1841 and used from the Mexican–American War to the American Civil War. It fired a 6.1 lb (2.8 kg) round shot up to a distance of 1,523 yd (1,393 m) at 5° elevation. It could also fire canister shot and spherical case shot (shrapnel). The cannon proved very effective when employed by light artillery units during the Mexican–American War. The cannon was used during the early years of the American Civil War, but it was soon outclassed by newer field guns such as the M1857 12-pounder Napoleon. In the U.S. Army, the 6-pounders were replaced as soon as more modern weapons became available and none were manufactured after 1862. However, the Confederate States Army continued to use the cannon for a longer period because the lesser industrial capacity of the South could not produce new guns as fast as the North.

M1841 6-pounder field gun
M1841 6-pounder field gun at Antietam National Battlefield
TypeSmoothbore cannon
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1841–1868
Used byUnited States
WarsMexican–American War
American Civil War
Production history
ManufacturerCyrus Alger & Co.
N. P. Ames
Produced1841
No. builtover 1,100
Variants1835, 1838, 1840
Specifications
Mass880 lb (399.2 kg)
Length60.0 in (152.4 cm)
Crew9

Shell weight6.1 lb (2.8 kg) shot
1.25 lb (0.6 kg) charge
Caliber3.67 in (93 mm)
Barrels1
ActionMuzzle loading
Carriage900 lb (408.2 kg)
Muzzle velocity1,439 ft/s (439 m/s)
Effective firing range1,523 yd (1,393 m)

Background edit

By the early 1800s gun-founders knew that two metals were suitable for the manufacture of cannon, iron and bronze. Bronze, an alloy made up of about 90% copper and 10% tin, was strong enough to resist the explosion of gunpowder without bursting the cannon. The guns were often referred to as brass cannons when in fact their composition was of bronze. The weakness of bronze guns was that, if fired too rapidly, they overheated and warped. Iron cannons did not warp and were much cheaper to manufacture. However, cast iron was more brittle than bronze. Iron cannons were heavier than bronze guns; this was not a problem with large caliber weapons aboard ships or in fortresses, but field artillery pieces needed to be lighter and more mobile.[1]

Before a cannon was accepted into service, it was subjected to proof testing in order to determine if the piece met the desired specifications and was safe to fire. First, the gun was weighed and measured. Second, the gun was fired; if it burst, then the entire batch was given extra scrutiny.[2] Typically, a proofing charge used approximately twice the weight of gunpowder as a normal firing charge.[2] Third, the inside of the bore was probed with a special instrument to make sure there were no cracks or gaps. Fourth, the vent was stopped up and water was forced into the bore; if water leaked out the cannon was rejected. Fifth, a mirror was inserted into the bore for a final inspection.[3]

From 1820 to 1840, American cannon founders made cast iron 6-pounders that were less reliable than guns used in the War of 1812.[4] In 1824, the Fort Pitt Foundry delivered 74 cast-iron 6-pounder guns out of an order of 100.[5] A second order of 100 cast-iron 6-pounders was delivered in 1828–1830 and at least 10 were rejected. Finally, 113 cast-iron 6-pounders were manufactured in 1836–1838 and 22 were rejected. No more orders were placed with the Fort Pitt Foundry. In 1833, the Columbia Foundry produced two cast-iron 6-pounders of which one burst during proof. They delivered 43 cast-iron 6-pounders in 1834–1836 but these were the last ones produced by the Columbia Foundry.[6] In 1840, an exasperated Secretary of War Joel Roberts Poinsett wrote, "...if guns sometimes fail, it is not because the gun is of iron, but because the founder is not perfect in his art. At present, he makes a good gun by accident, whereas it is by accident only that he should make a bad one."[7] The problem was finally discovered in 1847. During the period 1835–1839, American cannon founders switched from cold blast to hot blast cast iron for reasons of economy and convenience; this led to cast-iron guns being more prone to failure.[8]

Model 1841 and its variants edit

In 1835, the U.S. Army Ordnance Board meeting in Watervliet, New York decided to switch to bronze field guns. In July 1836, two established bronze foundries, Cyrus Alger & Company of Boston and N. P. Ames of Cabotville, Massachusetts were hired to manufacture bronze 6-pounder guns. Alger produced 26 and Ames produced 32 bronze Model 1835 6-pounder guns.[8] The Model 1838 bronze 6-pounder was a lighter cannon designed for horse artillery units. Alger delivered 62 and Ames delivered 36 of the Model 1838 gun. Ames also manufactured 27 Model 1840 bronze 6-pounders, which were heavier than the Model 1838.[9]

 
M1841 6-pounder field guns

The Model 1841 bronze 6-pounder cannon proved to be the most successful. The gun was not officially discarded by the US Army until 1868 though none were produced after 1862. Ames manufactured at least 646 Model 1841 guns and Alger produced at least 337. Of the latter group, 10 were so-called Cadet guns which weighed only 570 lb (258.5 kg). There were no recorded losses during proofing, though some of the guns varied as much as 10 lb (4.5 kg) from the official weight.[8] Four of the Cadet guns were produced for the Virginia Military Institute, two for the Arkansas Military Institute, and four for the Georgia Military Institute.[10] The first Model 1841 Ames guns were accepted in October 1841[11] and the first Alger guns were accepted in November 1841.[12]

The M1841 6-pounder was designed as a smoothbore gun, and only later were some 6-pounders converted to rifled guns.[13] The Eagle Foundry of Miles Greenwood of Cincinnati delivered 97 bronze 6-pounders of which 43 were rifled between August 1861 and December 1862. The Western Foundry of William D. Marshall & Company of St. Louis manufactured 33 bronze 6-pounders of which six were rifled between December 1861 and May 1862. Henry N. Hooper & Company of Boston produced eight bronze 6-pounders and Revere Copper Company of Boston delivered two similar guns in February 1862.[14]

Model 1841 bronze 6-pounder cannon and variants[15][note 1]
Description No. Accepted Base ring diameter Length w/o knob Bore length Bore len. in calibers Weight of barrel
Model 1835 58 9.8 in (24.9 cm) 60 in (152.4 cm) 57.5 in (146.1 cm) 15.7 743 lb (337.0 kg)
Model 1838 98 9.8 in (24.9 cm) 53.75 in (136.5 cm) 51.25 in (130.2 cm) 14.0 690 lb (313.0 kg)
Model 1840 27 10.3 in (26.2 cm) 53.75 in (136.5 cm) 51.25 in (130.2 cm) 14.0 812 lb (368.3 kg)
Model 1841 854+ 10.3 in (26.2 cm) 60 in (152.4 cm) 57.5 in (146.1 cm) 15.7 880 lb (399.2 kg)
Cadet guns 10 9.53 in (24.2 cm) 46 in (116.8 cm) 43 in (109.2 cm) 11.7 570 lb (258.5 kg)

Specifications edit

The Model 1841 bronze 6-pounder gun barrel was 60 in (152.4 cm) from the base ring to the muzzle and weighed 880 lb (399.2 kg). The diameter of the bore (caliber) was 3.67 in (9.32 cm) and the bore length was 57.5 in (146.1 cm). This means the bore was 15.67 calibers long.[16] The cannon fired a 6.1 lb (2.8 kg) round shot of 3.58 in (9.1 cm) diameter. The spherical case shot weighed 5.7 lb (2.6 kg) and released 41 musket balls when it burst. The canister round weighed 7.32 lb (3.3 kg) and contained 27 iron balls.[17] At 5° elevation, the gun could hurl the round shot a distance of 1,523 yd (1,392.6 m) with the standard firing charge of 1.25 lb (0.6 kg). At 4° elevation, the gun could throw the spherical case shot a distance of 1,200 yd (1,097.3 m).[18] Canister shot was effective up to a distance of 350 yd (320 m).[19] The muzzle velocity was 1,439 ft/s (439 m/s).[20]

 
Side elevation of a typical 19th-century cannon

A 6-pounder battery typically included four 6-pounder field guns and two M1841 12-pounder howitzers. Altogether, the battery required fourteen 6-horse teams and seven spare horses.[21] The teams pulled the six artillery pieces and limbers, six limbers and caissons, one battery wagon, and one traveling forge. Each caisson weighed 3,800 lb (1,724 kg) and carried two ammunition chests, each with 50 rounds. Each of the two limbers also carried one, so that each gun was supplied with four ammunition chests.[22] The carriage for the 6-pounder gun weighed 900 lb (408 kg).[23] A 6-pounder cannon and its limber weighed 3,185 lb (1,445 kg) when fully loaded with one 50-round ammunition chest.[24] The 1864 U.S. Field Artillery Instructions recommended that each ammunition chest contain 25 round shot, 20 spherical case shot, and 5 canister rounds.[25] Nine men manned each cannon, the gunner who commanded the gun and eight artillerists who were numbered according to their function. Of these, numbers 1 and 2 placed the round in the muzzle and rammed it home.[26]

Model 1841 bronze 6-pounder cannon specifications[16]
Description Dimension
Weight of the gun barrel 880 lb (399.2 kg)
Diameter of the bore (caliber) 3.67 in (9.32 cm)
Length of the bore 57.5 in (146.1 cm)
Length of the bore in calibers 15.7
Length from the rear of the base ring to the face of the muzzle 60 in (152.4 cm)
Length from the rear of the knob to the face of the muzzle 65.6 in (166.6 cm)
Length from the rear of the base ring to the end of the (second) reinforce 30 in (76.2 cm)
Length of the chase from the end of the reinforce to the rear of the astragal 22 in (55.9 cm)
Length from the rear of the astragal to the face of the muzzle 8 in (20.3 cm)
Length from the rear of the base ring to the rear of the trunnions 23.25 in (59.1 cm)
Diameter of the base ring 10.3 in (26.2 cm)
Thickness of metal at the vent 3.03 in (7.7 cm)
Thickness of metal at the end of the (second) reinforce 2.415 in (6.1 cm)
Thickness of metal at the end of the chase (astragal) 1.415 in (3.6 cm)

History edit

Mexican War edit

 
Major Ringgold was fatally wounded while leading a 6-pounder battery at Palo Alto.

The American bronze 6-pounder field guns saw action at the Battle of Palo Alto on 8 May 1846 during the Mexican–American War. General Zachary Taylor led a force numbering 2,228 troops that included two 18-pounder heavy cannons and two 4-gun light batteries under Major Samuel Ringgold and Captain James Duncan. They were opposed by General Mariano Arista with 365 officers, 3,461 rank and file, eight 4-pounder and two 8-pounder cannons. The action became largely an artillery duel where the American guns proved to be superior. American losses were five killed, 43 wounded, and two missing. However, 10 more soon died of their wounds, including Ringgold who was struck in both knees by a 4-pounder round shot. Arista verbally admitted losing 252 killed but wrote only 102 killed in his official report. The next morning, the Mexican army withdrew to a second position, but it was defeated that day at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma.[27]

At Palo Alto, both Ringgold's and Duncan's batteries maneuvered rapidly and inflicted severe casualties in the Mexican ranks. At the start of the action they deployed 100 yd (91 m) in front of the American infantry. Near the end of the action, under the cover of smoke, Duncan's battery unlimbered 300 yd (274 m) from its opponents and caused the Mexican right flank to pull back.[27] Both Ringgold's and Duncan's batteries were armed with bronze 6-pounder field guns. However, archeological evidence indicates that one or more 12-pounder howitzers may have been used also.[28] The Mexicans employed old French Gribeauval system cannons but they were still effective weapons. However, the inferior Mexican gunpowder caused many rounds to fall short. The Mexican artillery drivers were hired civilians, so that their cannons were much less mobile than those of the well-trained American drivers.[29]

Civil War edit

 
M1841 6-pounder field gun stands at Gettysburg National Military Park. The sign indicates that Latham's Confederate Battery was armed with one 6-pounder, one 12-pounder howitzer, and three 12-pounder Napoleons.

The M1841 bronze 6-pounder cannon proved to be a highly effective weapon during the Mexican–American War.[30] However, American Civil War combat experience soon showed that bronze smoothbore 6-pounder field guns were no longer effective weapons.[31] When George B. McClellan became commander of the Union Army of the Potomac he ordered, with only a few exceptions, that all of the Model 1841 smoothbore guns be replaced by M1857 12-pounder Napoleons, 3-inch Ordnance rifles, and Parrott rifles.[32] The Model 1841 guns were replaced in the eastern armies first and surviving records show a westward migration of the older model guns to the western armies where they persisted for a longer period of time. This is shown by the 30 June 1863 inventories of two western departments. The Department of the Cumberland reported having 24 smoothbore 6-pounders out of a total of 220 field artillery pieces, while the Department of the Ohio had eight smoothbore 6-pounders out of a total of 72 pieces.[31] Rifling was added to bronze 6-pounders, but this experiment was not successful because bronze wore out more easily than iron. The rifling eroded rapidly, rendering the guns inaccurate.[33]

During the Battle of Pea Ridge in the far west Trans-Mississippi theater on 7–8 March 1862, both armies still employed significant numbers of smoothbore and rifled 6-pounder field guns. In the Union army, three units were armed with four 6-pounder smoothbores and two 12-pounder howitzers: the 2nd Ohio Battery, 1st Iowa Independent Battery Light Artillery, and 3rd Iowa Independent Battery Light Artillery. The 4th Ohio Battery had four rifled 6-pounders and two 12-pounder howitzers. The 1st Independent Battery Indiana Light Artillery had four rifled and two smoothbore 6-pounder field guns. Battery A, 2nd Illinois Light Artillery Regiment had two rifled and two smoothbore 6-pounder field guns and two 12-pounder howitzers.[34] In the Confederate army, Clark's, Jackson's, and Gorham's Missouri batteries and Hart's Arkansas Battery each had four 6-pounder smoothbores. Mixed batteries with two 6-pounder smoothbores included Provence's Arkansas Battery and Wade's Missouri Battery and two more batteries.[35]

Approximately 127 bronze 6-pounder guns were manufactured in the Confederacy.[36] Because the South lacked the North's industrial capacity, the 6-pounders were employed by Confederate armies for a longer period.[37] At the Battle of Antietam on 17 September 1862, there were at least 41 smoothbore 6-pounder guns still being used in Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, while the Union Army of the Potomac no longer had any 6-pounders.[38] For example, the 4th Company, Washington Artillery (Eshleman's) was equipped with two 6-pounders and two 12-pounder howitzers.[39] On 13 November 1862, the Confederate Chief of Ordnance Josiah Gorgas issued an order that the only bronze guns to be manufactured must be 12-pounder Napoleons.[37] In early 1863, Lee sent his army's Model 1841 bronze 6-pounder guns to be melted down and recast into 12-pounder Napoleons.[40] At the Battle of Brice's Cross Roads the Confederates used canister in this old weapon to deadly effect.[41]

Civil War artillery edit

Characteristics of American Civil War artillery pieces[23][42]
Description Caliber Tube length Tube weight Carriage weight Shot weight Charge weight Range 5° elev.
M1841 6-pounder cannon 3.67 in (9.3 cm) 60 in (152.4 cm) 884 lb (401 kg) 900 lb (408 kg) 6.1 lb (2.8 kg) 1.25 lb (0.6 kg) 1,523 yd (1,393 m)
M1841 12-pounder cannon 4.62 in (11.7 cm) 78 in (198.1 cm) 1,757 lb (797 kg) 1,175 lb (533 kg) 12.3 lb (5.6 kg) 2.5 lb (1.1 kg) 1,663 yd (1,521 m)
M1841 12-pounder howitzer 4.62 in (11.7 cm) 53 in (134.6 cm) 788 lb (357 kg) 900 lb (408 kg) 8.9 lb (4.0 kg) 1.0 lb (0.5 kg) 1,072 yd (980 m)
M1841 24-pounder howitzer 5.82 in (14.8 cm) 65 in (165.1 cm) 1,318 lb (598 kg) 1,128 lb (512 kg) 18.4 lb (8.3 kg) 2.0 lb (0.9 kg) 1,322 yd (1,209 m)
M1857 12-pounder Napoleon 4.62 in (11.7 cm) 66 in (167.6 cm) 1,227 lb (557 kg) 1,128 lb (512 kg) 12.3 lb (5.6 kg) 2.5 lb (1.1 kg) 1,619 yd (1,480 m)
12-pounder James rifle 3.67 in (9.3 cm) 60 in (152.4 cm) 875 lb (397 kg) 900 lb (408 kg)[43] 12 lb (5.4 kg) 0.75 lb (0.3 kg) 1,700 yd (1,554 m)
3-inch Ordnance rifle 3.0 in (7.6 cm) 69 in (175.3 cm) 820 lb (372 kg) 900 lb (408 kg)[44] 9.5 lb (4.3 kg) 1.0 lb (0.5 kg) 1,830 yd (1,673 m)
10-pounder Parrott rifle 3.0 in (7.6 cm) 74 in (188.0 cm) 899 lb (408 kg) 900 lb (408 kg)[44] 9.5 lb (4.3 kg) 1.0 lb (0.5 kg) 1,900 yd (1,737 m)
20-pounder Parrott rifle 3.67 in (9.3 cm) 84 in (213.4 cm) 1,750 lb (794 kg) 1,175 lb (533 kg)[43] 20 lb (9.1 kg) 2.0 lb (0.9 kg) 1,900 yd (1,737 m)

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ The "854+" figure for the Model 1841 was given in a table published in Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks. It is not clear how this number was calculated. If the numbers of Model 1841 produced by Ames (646), Alger (337), Greenwood (97), Marshall (33), Hooper (8), and Revere (2) are added up, the sum is 1,123.
Citations
  1. ^ McConnell 1988, pp. 15–16.
  2. ^ a b McConnell 1988, p. 392.
  3. ^ McConnell 1988, pp. 25–27.
  4. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 42.
  5. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 32.
  6. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, pp. 33–36.
  7. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 39.
  8. ^ a b c Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 36.
  9. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, pp. 38–39.
  10. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 45.
  11. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 252.
  12. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 249.
  13. ^ Ripley 1970, p. 18.
  14. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, pp. 46–47.
  15. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 33.
  16. ^ a b Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 41.
  17. ^ Ripley 1970, p. 379.
  18. ^ Ripley 1970, p. 366.
  19. ^ Coggins 1983, p. 67.
  20. ^ Cole 2002, p. 298.
  21. ^ Coggins 1983, p. 73.
  22. ^ Coggins 1983, p. 68.
  23. ^ a b Coggins 1983, p. 66.
  24. ^ Coggins 1983, p. 69.
  25. ^ Katcher 2001, p. 18.
  26. ^ Johnson & Anderson 1995, p. 29.
  27. ^ a b Haecker 1994, pp. Chap.3.
  28. ^ Haecker 1994, pp. Chap.7.
  29. ^ Haecker 1994, pp. Chap.4.
  30. ^ Katcher 2001, p. 8.
  31. ^ a b Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 51.
  32. ^ Katcher 2001, p. 11.
  33. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 52.
  34. ^ Shea & Hess 1992, pp. 331–334.
  35. ^ Shea & Hess 1992, pp. 334–339.
  36. ^ Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 68.
  37. ^ a b Katcher 2001, p. 22.
  38. ^ Johnson & Anderson 1995, p. 129.
  39. ^ Johnson & Anderson 1995, p. 90.
  40. ^ Katcher 2001, p. 23.
  41. ^ Dougherty Kevin. Weapons of Mississippi. University Press of Mississippi 2010. pp. 112 ff. ISBN 9781604734515.
  42. ^ Coggins 1983, p. 77.
  43. ^ a b Johnson & Anderson 1995, p. 25.
  44. ^ a b Hazlett, Olmstead & Parks 1983, p. 217.

References edit

  • Coggins, Jack (1983). Arms and Equipment of the Civil War. New York, N.Y.: Fairfax Press. ISBN 0-517-402351.
  • Cole, Philip M. (2002). Civil War Artillery at Gettysburg. New York, N.Y.: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81145-6.
  • Haecker, Charles M. (1994). "A Thunder of Cannon: Archaeology of the Mexican-American War Battlefield of Palo Alto". Santa Fe, N.M.: National Park Service.
  • Hazlett, James C.; Olmstead, Edwin; Parks, M. Hume (1983). Field Artillery Weapons of the American Civil War. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-07210-3.
  • Johnson, Curt; Anderson, Richard C. Jr. (1995). Artillery Hell: The Employment of Artillery at Antietam. College Station, Tex.: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 0-89096-623-0.
  • McConnell, David (1988). "British Smooth-bore Artillery: A Technological Study to Support Identification, Acquisition, Restoration, Reproduction, and Interpretation of Artillery at National Historic Parks in Canada" (PDF). Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada.
  • Katcher, Philip (2001). American Civil War Artillery 1861–1865. Osceola, Wisc.: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-451-5.
  • Ripley, Warren (1970). Artillery and Ammunition of the Civil War. Charleston, S.C.: The Battery Press. ISBN 0-88394-003-5.
  • Shea, William L.; Hess, Earl J. (1992). Pea Ridge: Civil War Campaign in the West. Chapel Hill, N.C.: The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4669-4.

Further reading edit

  • Downey, Brian (2019). "The Weapons of Antietam". Antietam on the Web.
  • Morgan, James (2002). "Green Ones and Black Ones: The Most Common Field Pieces of the Civil War". civilwarhome.com.

External links edit

  • "Model 1841 6-Pounder Towed Field Gun". Military Factory. 2019.

m1841, pounder, field, bronze, smoothbore, muzzleloading, cannon, that, adopted, united, states, army, 1841, used, from, mexican, american, american, civil, fired, round, shot, distance, elevation, could, also, fire, canister, shot, spherical, case, shot, shra. The M1841 6 pounder field gun was a bronze smoothbore muzzleloading cannon that was adopted by the United States Army in 1841 and used from the Mexican American War to the American Civil War It fired a 6 1 lb 2 8 kg round shot up to a distance of 1 523 yd 1 393 m at 5 elevation It could also fire canister shot and spherical case shot shrapnel The cannon proved very effective when employed by light artillery units during the Mexican American War The cannon was used during the early years of the American Civil War but it was soon outclassed by newer field guns such as the M1857 12 pounder Napoleon In the U S Army the 6 pounders were replaced as soon as more modern weapons became available and none were manufactured after 1862 However the Confederate States Army continued to use the cannon for a longer period because the lesser industrial capacity of the South could not produce new guns as fast as the North M1841 6 pounder field gunM1841 6 pounder field gun at Antietam National BattlefieldTypeSmoothbore cannonPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1841 1868Used byUnited StatesWarsMexican American WarAmerican Civil WarProduction historyManufacturerCyrus Alger amp Co N P AmesProduced1841No builtover 1 100Variants1835 1838 1840SpecificationsMass880 lb 399 2 kg Length60 0 in 152 4 cm Crew9Shell weight6 1 lb 2 8 kg shot1 25 lb 0 6 kg chargeCaliber3 67 in 93 mm Barrels1ActionMuzzle loadingCarriage900 lb 408 2 kg Muzzle velocity1 439 ft s 439 m s Effective firing range1 523 yd 1 393 m Contents 1 Background 2 Model 1841 and its variants 3 Specifications 4 History 4 1 Mexican War 4 2 Civil War 5 Civil War artillery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editBy the early 1800s gun founders knew that two metals were suitable for the manufacture of cannon iron and bronze Bronze an alloy made up of about 90 copper and 10 tin was strong enough to resist the explosion of gunpowder without bursting the cannon The guns were often referred to as brass cannons when in fact their composition was of bronze The weakness of bronze guns was that if fired too rapidly they overheated and warped Iron cannons did not warp and were much cheaper to manufacture However cast iron was more brittle than bronze Iron cannons were heavier than bronze guns this was not a problem with large caliber weapons aboard ships or in fortresses but field artillery pieces needed to be lighter and more mobile 1 Before a cannon was accepted into service it was subjected to proof testing in order to determine if the piece met the desired specifications and was safe to fire First the gun was weighed and measured Second the gun was fired if it burst then the entire batch was given extra scrutiny 2 Typically a proofing charge used approximately twice the weight of gunpowder as a normal firing charge 2 Third the inside of the bore was probed with a special instrument to make sure there were no cracks or gaps Fourth the vent was stopped up and water was forced into the bore if water leaked out the cannon was rejected Fifth a mirror was inserted into the bore for a final inspection 3 From 1820 to 1840 American cannon founders made cast iron 6 pounders that were less reliable than guns used in the War of 1812 4 In 1824 the Fort Pitt Foundry delivered 74 cast iron 6 pounder guns out of an order of 100 5 A second order of 100 cast iron 6 pounders was delivered in 1828 1830 and at least 10 were rejected Finally 113 cast iron 6 pounders were manufactured in 1836 1838 and 22 were rejected No more orders were placed with the Fort Pitt Foundry In 1833 the Columbia Foundry produced two cast iron 6 pounders of which one burst during proof They delivered 43 cast iron 6 pounders in 1834 1836 but these were the last ones produced by the Columbia Foundry 6 In 1840 an exasperated Secretary of War Joel Roberts Poinsett wrote if guns sometimes fail it is not because the gun is of iron but because the founder is not perfect in his art At present he makes a good gun by accident whereas it is by accident only that he should make a bad one 7 The problem was finally discovered in 1847 During the period 1835 1839 American cannon founders switched from cold blast to hot blast cast iron for reasons of economy and convenience this led to cast iron guns being more prone to failure 8 Model 1841 and its variants editIn 1835 the U S Army Ordnance Board meeting in Watervliet New York decided to switch to bronze field guns In July 1836 two established bronze foundries Cyrus Alger amp Company of Boston and N P Ames of Cabotville Massachusetts were hired to manufacture bronze 6 pounder guns Alger produced 26 and Ames produced 32 bronze Model 1835 6 pounder guns 8 The Model 1838 bronze 6 pounder was a lighter cannon designed for horse artillery units Alger delivered 62 and Ames delivered 36 of the Model 1838 gun Ames also manufactured 27 Model 1840 bronze 6 pounders which were heavier than the Model 1838 9 nbsp M1841 6 pounder field guns The Model 1841 bronze 6 pounder cannon proved to be the most successful The gun was not officially discarded by the US Army until 1868 though none were produced after 1862 Ames manufactured at least 646 Model 1841 guns and Alger produced at least 337 Of the latter group 10 were so called Cadet guns which weighed only 570 lb 258 5 kg There were no recorded losses during proofing though some of the guns varied as much as 10 lb 4 5 kg from the official weight 8 Four of the Cadet guns were produced for the Virginia Military Institute two for the Arkansas Military Institute and four for the Georgia Military Institute 10 The first Model 1841 Ames guns were accepted in October 1841 11 and the first Alger guns were accepted in November 1841 12 The M1841 6 pounder was designed as a smoothbore gun and only later were some 6 pounders converted to rifled guns 13 The Eagle Foundry of Miles Greenwood of Cincinnati delivered 97 bronze 6 pounders of which 43 were rifled between August 1861 and December 1862 The Western Foundry of William D Marshall amp Company of St Louis manufactured 33 bronze 6 pounders of which six were rifled between December 1861 and May 1862 Henry N Hooper amp Company of Boston produced eight bronze 6 pounders and Revere Copper Company of Boston delivered two similar guns in February 1862 14 Model 1841 bronze 6 pounder cannon and variants 15 note 1 Description No Accepted Base ring diameter Length w o knob Bore length Bore len in calibers Weight of barrel Model 1835 58 9 8 in 24 9 cm 60 in 152 4 cm 57 5 in 146 1 cm 15 7 743 lb 337 0 kg Model 1838 98 9 8 in 24 9 cm 53 75 in 136 5 cm 51 25 in 130 2 cm 14 0 690 lb 313 0 kg Model 1840 27 10 3 in 26 2 cm 53 75 in 136 5 cm 51 25 in 130 2 cm 14 0 812 lb 368 3 kg Model 1841 854 10 3 in 26 2 cm 60 in 152 4 cm 57 5 in 146 1 cm 15 7 880 lb 399 2 kg Cadet guns 10 9 53 in 24 2 cm 46 in 116 8 cm 43 in 109 2 cm 11 7 570 lb 258 5 kg Specifications editThe Model 1841 bronze 6 pounder gun barrel was 60 in 152 4 cm from the base ring to the muzzle and weighed 880 lb 399 2 kg The diameter of the bore caliber was 3 67 in 9 32 cm and the bore length was 57 5 in 146 1 cm This means the bore was 15 67 calibers long 16 The cannon fired a 6 1 lb 2 8 kg round shot of 3 58 in 9 1 cm diameter The spherical case shot weighed 5 7 lb 2 6 kg and released 41 musket balls when it burst The canister round weighed 7 32 lb 3 3 kg and contained 27 iron balls 17 At 5 elevation the gun could hurl the round shot a distance of 1 523 yd 1 392 6 m with the standard firing charge of 1 25 lb 0 6 kg At 4 elevation the gun could throw the spherical case shot a distance of 1 200 yd 1 097 3 m 18 Canister shot was effective up to a distance of 350 yd 320 m 19 The muzzle velocity was 1 439 ft s 439 m s 20 nbsp Side elevation of a typical 19th century cannon A 6 pounder battery typically included four 6 pounder field guns and two M1841 12 pounder howitzers Altogether the battery required fourteen 6 horse teams and seven spare horses 21 The teams pulled the six artillery pieces and limbers six limbers and caissons one battery wagon and one traveling forge Each caisson weighed 3 800 lb 1 724 kg and carried two ammunition chests each with 50 rounds Each of the two limbers also carried one so that each gun was supplied with four ammunition chests 22 The carriage for the 6 pounder gun weighed 900 lb 408 kg 23 A 6 pounder cannon and its limber weighed 3 185 lb 1 445 kg when fully loaded with one 50 round ammunition chest 24 The 1864 U S Field Artillery Instructions recommended that each ammunition chest contain 25 round shot 20 spherical case shot and 5 canister rounds 25 Nine men manned each cannon the gunner who commanded the gun and eight artillerists who were numbered according to their function Of these numbers 1 and 2 placed the round in the muzzle and rammed it home 26 Model 1841 bronze 6 pounder cannon specifications 16 Description Dimension Weight of the gun barrel 880 lb 399 2 kg Diameter of the bore caliber 3 67 in 9 32 cm Length of the bore 57 5 in 146 1 cm Length of the bore in calibers 15 7 Length from the rear of the base ring to the face of the muzzle 60 in 152 4 cm Length from the rear of the knob to the face of the muzzle 65 6 in 166 6 cm Length from the rear of the base ring to the end of the second reinforce 30 in 76 2 cm Length of the chase from the end of the reinforce to the rear of the astragal 22 in 55 9 cm Length from the rear of the astragal to the face of the muzzle 8 in 20 3 cm Length from the rear of the base ring to the rear of the trunnions 23 25 in 59 1 cm Diameter of the base ring 10 3 in 26 2 cm Thickness of metal at the vent 3 03 in 7 7 cm Thickness of metal at the end of the second reinforce 2 415 in 6 1 cm Thickness of metal at the end of the chase astragal 1 415 in 3 6 cm History editMexican War edit nbsp Major Ringgold was fatally wounded while leading a 6 pounder battery at Palo Alto The American bronze 6 pounder field guns saw action at the Battle of Palo Alto on 8 May 1846 during the Mexican American War General Zachary Taylor led a force numbering 2 228 troops that included two 18 pounder heavy cannons and two 4 gun light batteries under Major Samuel Ringgold and Captain James Duncan They were opposed by General Mariano Arista with 365 officers 3 461 rank and file eight 4 pounder and two 8 pounder cannons The action became largely an artillery duel where the American guns proved to be superior American losses were five killed 43 wounded and two missing However 10 more soon died of their wounds including Ringgold who was struck in both knees by a 4 pounder round shot Arista verbally admitted losing 252 killed but wrote only 102 killed in his official report The next morning the Mexican army withdrew to a second position but it was defeated that day at the Battle of Resaca de la Palma 27 At Palo Alto both Ringgold s and Duncan s batteries maneuvered rapidly and inflicted severe casualties in the Mexican ranks At the start of the action they deployed 100 yd 91 m in front of the American infantry Near the end of the action under the cover of smoke Duncan s battery unlimbered 300 yd 274 m from its opponents and caused the Mexican right flank to pull back 27 Both Ringgold s and Duncan s batteries were armed with bronze 6 pounder field guns However archeological evidence indicates that one or more 12 pounder howitzers may have been used also 28 The Mexicans employed old French Gribeauval system cannons but they were still effective weapons However the inferior Mexican gunpowder caused many rounds to fall short The Mexican artillery drivers were hired civilians so that their cannons were much less mobile than those of the well trained American drivers 29 Civil War edit nbsp M1841 6 pounder field gun stands at Gettysburg National Military Park The sign indicates that Latham s Confederate Battery was armed with one 6 pounder one 12 pounder howitzer and three 12 pounder Napoleons The M1841 bronze 6 pounder cannon proved to be a highly effective weapon during the Mexican American War 30 However American Civil War combat experience soon showed that bronze smoothbore 6 pounder field guns were no longer effective weapons 31 When George B McClellan became commander of the Union Army of the Potomac he ordered with only a few exceptions that all of the Model 1841 smoothbore guns be replaced by M1857 12 pounder Napoleons 3 inch Ordnance rifles and Parrott rifles 32 The Model 1841 guns were replaced in the eastern armies first and surviving records show a westward migration of the older model guns to the western armies where they persisted for a longer period of time This is shown by the 30 June 1863 inventories of two western departments The Department of the Cumberland reported having 24 smoothbore 6 pounders out of a total of 220 field artillery pieces while the Department of the Ohio had eight smoothbore 6 pounders out of a total of 72 pieces 31 Rifling was added to bronze 6 pounders but this experiment was not successful because bronze wore out more easily than iron The rifling eroded rapidly rendering the guns inaccurate 33 During the Battle of Pea Ridge in the far west Trans Mississippi theater on 7 8 March 1862 both armies still employed significant numbers of smoothbore and rifled 6 pounder field guns In the Union army three units were armed with four 6 pounder smoothbores and two 12 pounder howitzers the 2nd Ohio Battery 1st Iowa Independent Battery Light Artillery and 3rd Iowa Independent Battery Light Artillery The 4th Ohio Battery had four rifled 6 pounders and two 12 pounder howitzers The 1st Independent Battery Indiana Light Artillery had four rifled and two smoothbore 6 pounder field guns Battery A 2nd Illinois Light Artillery Regiment had two rifled and two smoothbore 6 pounder field guns and two 12 pounder howitzers 34 In the Confederate army Clark s Jackson s and Gorham s Missouri batteries and Hart s Arkansas Battery each had four 6 pounder smoothbores Mixed batteries with two 6 pounder smoothbores included Provence s Arkansas Battery and Wade s Missouri Battery and two more batteries 35 Approximately 127 bronze 6 pounder guns were manufactured in the Confederacy 36 Because the South lacked the North s industrial capacity the 6 pounders were employed by Confederate armies for a longer period 37 At the Battle of Antietam on 17 September 1862 there were at least 41 smoothbore 6 pounder guns still being used in Robert E Lee s Confederate Army of Northern Virginia while the Union Army of the Potomac no longer had any 6 pounders 38 For example the 4th Company Washington Artillery Eshleman s was equipped with two 6 pounders and two 12 pounder howitzers 39 On 13 November 1862 the Confederate Chief of Ordnance Josiah Gorgas issued an order that the only bronze guns to be manufactured must be 12 pounder Napoleons 37 In early 1863 Lee sent his army s Model 1841 bronze 6 pounder guns to be melted down and recast into 12 pounder Napoleons 40 At the Battle of Brice s Cross Roads the Confederates used canister in this old weapon to deadly effect 41 Civil War artillery editMain article Field artillery in the American Civil War Characteristics of American Civil War artillery pieces 23 42 Description Caliber Tube length Tube weight Carriage weight Shot weight Charge weight Range 5 elev M1841 6 pounder cannon 3 67 in 9 3 cm 60 in 152 4 cm 884 lb 401 kg 900 lb 408 kg 6 1 lb 2 8 kg 1 25 lb 0 6 kg 1 523 yd 1 393 m M1841 12 pounder cannon 4 62 in 11 7 cm 78 in 198 1 cm 1 757 lb 797 kg 1 175 lb 533 kg 12 3 lb 5 6 kg 2 5 lb 1 1 kg 1 663 yd 1 521 m M1841 12 pounder howitzer 4 62 in 11 7 cm 53 in 134 6 cm 788 lb 357 kg 900 lb 408 kg 8 9 lb 4 0 kg 1 0 lb 0 5 kg 1 072 yd 980 m M1841 24 pounder howitzer 5 82 in 14 8 cm 65 in 165 1 cm 1 318 lb 598 kg 1 128 lb 512 kg 18 4 lb 8 3 kg 2 0 lb 0 9 kg 1 322 yd 1 209 m M1857 12 pounder Napoleon 4 62 in 11 7 cm 66 in 167 6 cm 1 227 lb 557 kg 1 128 lb 512 kg 12 3 lb 5 6 kg 2 5 lb 1 1 kg 1 619 yd 1 480 m 12 pounder James rifle 3 67 in 9 3 cm 60 in 152 4 cm 875 lb 397 kg 900 lb 408 kg 43 12 lb 5 4 kg 0 75 lb 0 3 kg 1 700 yd 1 554 m 3 inch Ordnance rifle 3 0 in 7 6 cm 69 in 175 3 cm 820 lb 372 kg 900 lb 408 kg 44 9 5 lb 4 3 kg 1 0 lb 0 5 kg 1 830 yd 1 673 m 10 pounder Parrott rifle 3 0 in 7 6 cm 74 in 188 0 cm 899 lb 408 kg 900 lb 408 kg 44 9 5 lb 4 3 kg 1 0 lb 0 5 kg 1 900 yd 1 737 m 20 pounder Parrott rifle 3 67 in 9 3 cm 84 in 213 4 cm 1 750 lb 794 kg 1 175 lb 533 kg 43 20 lb 9 1 kg 2 0 lb 0 9 kg 1 900 yd 1 737 m See also edit14 pounder James rifleNotes editFootnotes The 854 figure for the Model 1841 was given in a table published in Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks It is not clear how this number was calculated If the numbers of Model 1841 produced by Ames 646 Alger 337 Greenwood 97 Marshall 33 Hooper 8 and Revere 2 are added up the sum is 1 123 Citations McConnell 1988 pp 15 16 a b McConnell 1988 p 392 McConnell 1988 pp 25 27 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 42 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 32 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 pp 33 36 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 39 a b c Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 36 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 pp 38 39 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 45 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 252 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 249 Ripley 1970 p 18 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 pp 46 47 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 33 a b Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 41 Ripley 1970 p 379 Ripley 1970 p 366 Coggins 1983 p 67 Cole 2002 p 298 Coggins 1983 p 73 Coggins 1983 p 68 a b Coggins 1983 p 66 Coggins 1983 p 69 Katcher 2001 p 18 Johnson amp Anderson 1995 p 29 a b Haecker 1994 pp Chap 3 Haecker 1994 pp Chap 7 Haecker 1994 pp Chap 4 Katcher 2001 p 8 a b Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 51 Katcher 2001 p 11 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 52 Shea amp Hess 1992 pp 331 334 Shea amp Hess 1992 pp 334 339 Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 68 a b Katcher 2001 p 22 Johnson amp Anderson 1995 p 129 Johnson amp Anderson 1995 p 90 Katcher 2001 p 23 Dougherty Kevin Weapons of Mississippi University Press of Mississippi 2010 pp 112 ff ISBN 9781604734515 Coggins 1983 p 77 a b Johnson amp Anderson 1995 p 25 a b Hazlett Olmstead amp Parks 1983 p 217 References editCoggins Jack 1983 Arms and Equipment of the Civil War New York N Y Fairfax Press ISBN 0 517 402351 Cole Philip M 2002 Civil War Artillery at Gettysburg New York N Y Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81145 6 Haecker Charles M 1994 A Thunder of Cannon Archaeology of the Mexican American War Battlefield of Palo Alto Santa Fe N M National Park Service Hazlett James C Olmstead Edwin Parks M Hume 1983 Field Artillery Weapons of the American Civil War Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 07210 3 Johnson Curt Anderson Richard C Jr 1995 Artillery Hell The Employment of Artillery at Antietam College Station Tex Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 0 89096 623 0 McConnell David 1988 British Smooth bore Artillery A Technological Study to Support Identification Acquisition Restoration Reproduction and Interpretation of Artillery at National Historic Parks in Canada PDF Ottawa Minister of Supply and Services Canada Katcher Philip 2001 American Civil War Artillery 1861 1865 Osceola Wisc Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 451 5 Ripley Warren 1970 Artillery and Ammunition of the Civil War Charleston S C The Battery Press ISBN 0 88394 003 5 Shea William L Hess Earl J 1992 Pea Ridge Civil War Campaign in the West Chapel Hill N C The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4669 4 Further reading editDowney Brian 2019 The Weapons of Antietam Antietam on the Web Morgan James 2002 Green Ones and Black Ones The Most Common Field Pieces of the Civil War civilwarhome com External links edit Model 1841 6 Pounder Towed Field Gun Military Factory 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M1841 6 pounder field gun amp oldid 1195465397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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