Grape Shot |
The older ammunition is what is called Grape Shot. This consisted of usually nine iron balls stacked on top of each other and separated by iron plates. These large, sometimes over two inch diameter in field use, balls had a relatively long range. Their chief disadvantage was the limited number of projectiles in each round. Part of why it was called Grape Shot was the fact that it was often encased in a cloth bag with twine running between the rounds, somewhat resembling a bunch of grapes.
Canister serves the same function but much more effectively. As of the battle of Gettysburg (July 1-3 1863) the canister round for a Napoleon consisted of twenty-seven 1.5 inch iron balls. This version had a maximum effective range of 400 yards. As the enemy got closer it was not uncommon for the order to be given for "DOUBLE CANISTER!" or even "TRIPLE CANISTER!" This usually happened when the oncoming enemy infantry was getting to less than 100 yards range. This consisted simply of loading one powder charge into the cannon with multiple canister rounds stuffed on top. This increased the danger of bursting the cannon itself due to back pressure. At the same time, if the enemy is at twenty yards distant and fully intend to kill me, I think I'd take my chances.
Canister Write up |
By late 1863 it was determined that the conventional canister round was not effective enough. It was rarely used at 400 yards so why have balls inside for that range? The Union developed a version with 78 smaller balls inside for the Napoleon, trading long range for close in lethality and reducing the amount of doubling required.
Components of a fired Canister Round |
A few side notes. Due to the larger bores on smoothbore guns the canister rounds contained more balls than rifled guns firing similar weight ammunition. As such while the rifled gun might do damage to the enemy at the start of their advance, up close the smoothbore did the superior damage. At the same time, canister scraped along the walls of the bore when fired. On an iron gun this had little impact but on a bronze gun it often removed metal, resulting in the bore at the muzzle being larger than at the back or breech of the gun. "Goldie's" muzzle is indeed enlarged so it is possible that she sent many rounds of canister at the enemy.
Goldie (Bronze 6 Pounder) Muzzle |
A final note, most guns only carried five rounds of canister with them into any given battle. If the battery has gone to canister there likely is no time available to bring up more ammunition from the rear. To supplement the canister rounds the gun crews would press any case shot rounds into emergency service. Loaded without the fuse the projectile would explode at the muzzle, serving as a reasonable substitute for canister or grape shot. The common term for this was "rotten shot." Artillery fuses will be discussed in a later post.
-Corporal
I will apologize for the blurriness of some of the photographs. I did not realize it until after the event.
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