Mountain howitzer back on rampart at Fort Sumter

Published: December 15, 2012 

Fort Sumter Howitzer

In this Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2012 photo, a mountain howitzer like those used in the final months of the Confederate defense of Fort Sumter in Charleston, S.C., rests on a fort rampart. The howitzer was returned to the wall this week after its old wooden carriage was replaced with a new $12,000 steel carriage that is a replica of the original. (AP Photo/Bruce Smith)

Bruce Smith — AP

— A gun like those used by Confederates in the final months defending Fort Sumter is back on the ramparts of the Charleston fort.

A mountain howitzer cast in 1863 was put back this week after six years. It had been removed after its original wooden carriage deteriorated from spending years in the elements.

The 120-pound howitzer was kept in the museum but has a new protective coating and is mounted on a $12,000 steel carriage. Rick Dorrance, the fort’s chief of resource management, said Civil War sites nationwide are increasingly replacing wooden gun carriages with steel.

During the final months of the defense of Sumter, the wheeled howitzers were in bombproof areas in the daytime and rolled to the walls at night.

Order Reprint Back to Top

Find a Home

$415,000 Columbia
3 bed, 2 full bath. Commercial property - Zone M1. Rare ...

Find a Car

Search New Cars
Ads by Yahoo!