To all:
I have just finished reading a great book called Archaeological Perspectives on the American Civil War by Clarence Geier and Steven Potter. In it, they cite the frequency of findings of caltrops (cavalry obstacles designed to hurt enemy horses' hooves) in the Highway 27 project corridor on the Chickamauga Battlefield.
"One hundred six caltrops were clustered together in the northern extentof the projected corridor. This type of item was thrown in roads and in front of defensive positions as a deterrent to cavalry attacks. The caltrops would catchthe hooves of horses, hobbling them. They were made of iron and were about two inches from point to point." (Geier and Potter: 2000, pg. 299)
That got me thinking as how to start an educated discourse about "non-standard" weaponry used in the American Civil War. It's a fascinating as well as a suprising topic at the ingenuity of our ancestors and to what extent they actually went to invent new ideas of weaponry or improve upon older ones. Some other examples I have heard of being used in the period were:
-caltrops
-lances (thrown away way-early in the war, but still used nonetheless)
-"land torpedoes" (I heard the first casualty of a land mine was a
Yankee officer on his horse. Does anyone have a reference on this?
What would the land torpedo look like anyway?)
-harbor naval mines (friction primer, battery ignition, etc)
-hand grenades (Ketchum's patent, etc.)
-volley guns
-early breech-loading artillery
On MythBusters on the Discovery Channel the other day, they tested the experimentally-documented idea of a Confederate "steam powered machine gun" that hurled lead bullets at its target with centrifugal force WITHOUT using valuable black powder. They said the idea was possible, but due to its inaccuracy and lack of ability to aim the weapon, then it was not useable. They said an original WAS built and tested, though.
The challenge: Can you think of others and cite specific references in published works to "non-standard" armaments? Any weapons we don't think of commonly as from the period, but were actually used will do fine here.
Thanks- Johnny Lloyd
I have just finished reading a great book called Archaeological Perspectives on the American Civil War by Clarence Geier and Steven Potter. In it, they cite the frequency of findings of caltrops (cavalry obstacles designed to hurt enemy horses' hooves) in the Highway 27 project corridor on the Chickamauga Battlefield.
"One hundred six caltrops were clustered together in the northern extentof the projected corridor. This type of item was thrown in roads and in front of defensive positions as a deterrent to cavalry attacks. The caltrops would catchthe hooves of horses, hobbling them. They were made of iron and were about two inches from point to point." (Geier and Potter: 2000, pg. 299)
That got me thinking as how to start an educated discourse about "non-standard" weaponry used in the American Civil War. It's a fascinating as well as a suprising topic at the ingenuity of our ancestors and to what extent they actually went to invent new ideas of weaponry or improve upon older ones. Some other examples I have heard of being used in the period were:
-caltrops
-lances (thrown away way-early in the war, but still used nonetheless)
-"land torpedoes" (I heard the first casualty of a land mine was a
Yankee officer on his horse. Does anyone have a reference on this?
What would the land torpedo look like anyway?)
-harbor naval mines (friction primer, battery ignition, etc)
-hand grenades (Ketchum's patent, etc.)
-volley guns
-early breech-loading artillery
On MythBusters on the Discovery Channel the other day, they tested the experimentally-documented idea of a Confederate "steam powered machine gun" that hurled lead bullets at its target with centrifugal force WITHOUT using valuable black powder. They said the idea was possible, but due to its inaccuracy and lack of ability to aim the weapon, then it was not useable. They said an original WAS built and tested, though.
The challenge: Can you think of others and cite specific references in published works to "non-standard" armaments? Any weapons we don't think of commonly as from the period, but were actually used will do fine here.
Thanks- Johnny Lloyd
Comment