|
Shot
Cast
iron with no explosive. Used against cavalry, troops in a column,
buildings and other solid objects. More accurate than shell or spherical
case with a longer range.
Solid Shot is what is classically known as a cannonball. The weight
of the solid shot that a gun would fire determined whether a cannon was
a 6-pounder, 12- pounder, etc. Solid shot did serve as an antipersonnel
weapon, but its main purpose was to batter down walls, buildings, and
other fortifications.
Its smashing effect was used against opposing batteries, wagons,
buildings as well as against infantry and cavalry. A skillful gunner
could cause the shot to skip across the ground in front of advancing
troops, causing it to throw rocks, dirt and debris. At Pea Ridge,
Federal gunners fired shot into the rocky ridge that the Confederates
were sheltering in, causing the projectile to shatter when it hit the
trees or rock face. These fragments multiplied the shot's killing power.
Stone balls, cheap to manufacture, relatively light and therefore
well suited to the feeble construction of early ordnance, were in
general use for large caliber cannon in the fourteenth century. There
were experiments along other lines such as those at Tournay in the
1330's with long, pointed projectiles. Lead-coated stones were fairly
popular, and solid lead balls were used in some small pieces, but the
stone ball was more or less standard.
Cast-iron shot had been introduced by 1400, and, with the improvement
of cannon during that century, iron shot gradually replaced stone. By
the end of the 1500's stone survived for use only in the pedreros,
murtherers, and other relics of the earlier period. Iron shot for the
smoothbore was a solid, round shot, cast in fairly accurate molds; the
mold marks that invariably show on all cannonballs were of small
importance, for the ball did not fit the bore tightly. After casting,
shot were checked with a ring gauge -- a hoop through which each ball
had to pass. The Spanish term for this tool is very descriptive:
pasabala, "ball-passer."
Shot was used mainly in the flat-trajectory cannon. The small caliber
guns fired nothing but shot, for small sizes of the other type
projectiles were not effective. Shot was the prescription when the
situation called for "great accuracy, at very long range," and
penetration. Fired at ships, a shot was capable of breaching the planks
(at 100-yard range a 24-pounder shot would penetrate 4-1/2 feet of
"sound and hard" oak). With a fair aim at the waterline, a gunner could
sink or seriously damage a vessel with a few rounds. On ironclad targets
like the Monitor and Virginia (Merrimack), however, round shot did
little more than bounce; it took the long, armor-piercing rifle
projectile to force the development of the tremendously thick plate of
modern times.
Spherical Case
Developed
by the British Lieutenant (later General) Henry Shrapnel (1761-1842).
Hollow shell with powder and 40-80 musket balls that exploded in all
directions. Fused; used 500- 1,500 yards. More effective than shell, but
more difficult to manufacture.
Spherical Case, or Case Shot was the same size as the solid shot. The
one major difference was it was hollow in the middle. Inside the hollow
case or round was black powder filled with iron balls. Initially, when
the powder bag was ignited, the fire would encircle the round inside the
cannon tube, igniting a paper fuse that was inserted into a wooden plug
at the top of the round. As the ball traveled down range, the fuse would
burn until it reached the inside of the round and the black powder would
be ignited. The case would burst in the air and above the enemy causing
fragments of iron and balls to rain down upon the unlucky foe.
Similar to the common shell, this had thinner walls and was filled
with small lead or iron balls, called case shot. The case shot scattered
over a wide area when the projectile burst, giving it an added killing
effect. On land this was used against both men and animals.
Spherical case shot was an attempt to carry the effectiveness of
grape and canister beyond its previous range, by means of a bursting
shell. It was the forerunner of the shrapnel used so much in World War I
and was invented by Lt. Henry Shrapnel, of the British Army, in 1784.
There had been previous attempts to produce a projectile of this kind,
such as the German Zimmerman's "hail shot" of 1573—case shot with a
bursting charge and a primitive time fuze—but Shrapnel's invention was
the first air-bursting case shot which, in technical words, "imparted
directional velocity" to the bullets it contained. Shrapnel's new shell
was first used against the French in 1808, but was not called by its
inventor's name until 1852.
Canister
Tin
can containing 27 iron balls packed in sawdust. Tin can ripped open at
the muzzle and showered the balls directly at the troops. Good for
repelling the enemy at close range--50-300 yards. For more devastating
effect, could be used in double load. This turned a cannon into a giant
shotgun.
One of the earliest kinds of scatter projectiles was case shot, used
at Constantinople in 1453. The name comes from its case, or can, usually
metal, which was filled with scrap, musket balls, or slugs.
Canister was also an antipersonnel weapon. The size of a large orange
juice can, it was packed with layer upon layer of 1 inch diameter iron
balls and sawdust. When fired, it was basically a gigantic shot gun
shell as the powder charge disintegrated the can and it would mow down
anyone by spraying out iron balls 400 yards down range within a width of
25 yards as it was being propelled out of the tube.
A tin cylinder filled with iron balls, it was fired at extremely
close range (less than 400 yards) against attacking infantry or cavalry.
At ranges of less than 200 yards, 2 and 3 rounds of canister were fired
at once. The effect of a canister round firing was similar to a giant
shotgun blast.
Incendiary / Hot Shot
Incendiary missiles, such
as buckets or barrels filled with a fiercely burning composition, had
been used from earliest times, long before cannon. These crude
incendiaries survived through the 1700's as, for instance, the flaming
cargoes of fire ships that were sent amidst the enemy fleet. But in the
year 1672 there appeared an iron shell called a carcass, filled with
pitch and other materials that burned at intense heat for about 8
minutes. The flame escaped through vents, three to five in number,
around the fuze hole of the shell. The carcass was standard ammunition
until smoothbores went out of use. The United States ordnance manual of
1861 lists carcasses for 12-, 18-, 24-, 32-, and 42-pounder guns as well
as 8-, 10-, and 13-inch mortars.
During the late 1500's,
the heating of iron cannon balls to serve as incendiaries was suggested,
but not for another 200 years was the idea successfully carried out. Hot
shot was nothing but round shot, heated to a red glow over a grate or in
a furnace. It was fired from cannon at such inflammable targets as
wooden ships or powder magazines. During the siege of Gibraltar in 1782,
the British fired and destroyed a part of Spain's fleet with hot shot;
and in United States seacoast forts shot furnaces were standard
equipment during the first half of the 1800's.
Loading hot shot was not particularly dangerous. After the powder
charge was in the gun with a dry wad in front of it, another wad of wet
straw, or clay, was put into the barrel. When the cherry-red shot was
rammed home, the wet wad prevented a premature explosion of the charge.
Chain Shot
Chain shot ususally
consisted of two balls of shot that were joined together by a chain. But
chain shot was made in a variety of forms. A "split shot" was a split
ball, the two halves of which linked together by two heavy links of
chain. "Split chain shot" and "spider shot" were other variations of
chain rounds. The type known as "star shot" was a bag containing an iron
ring to which were fasted five 3 to 4 foot lengths of chain. There is
one apocryphal tale, about an experiment with chain shot as
anti-personnel missiles: instead of charging a single cannon with the
two balls, two guns were used, side by side. The ball in one gun was
chained to the ball in the other. The projectiles were to fly forth,
stretching the long chain between them, mowing down a sizeable segment
of the enemy. Instead, the chain wrapped the gun crews in a murderous
embrace; one gun had fired late.
Bar Shot
Bar shot appears in a Castillo
inventory of 1706, and like chain shot, was for specialized work like
cutting a ship's rigging. Bar shot consisted of two spherical balls of
shot joined together with a bar. The principle of these types of shot
was that they could be fired at the masts and rigging of ships and their
whirling action would mangle and ruin a ship's sails and rigging, or to
destroy her masts and yards.
Shell
Round,
hollow projectile with a powder-filled cavity. Fused; exploded into 5-12
large pieces. Loud air burst terrorized troops and horses.
The word "bomb" comes from the French, who derived it from the Latin.
But the Romans got it originally from the Greek bombos, meaning a deep,
hollow sound. "Bombard" is a derivation. Today bomb is pronounced
"balm," but in the early days it was commonly pronounced "bum." The
modern equivalent of the "bum" is an HE shell.
The first recorded use of explosive shells was by the Venetians in
1376. Their bombs were hemispheres of stone or bronze, joined together
with hoops and exploded by means of a primitive powder fuze. Shells
filled with explosive or incendiary mixtures were standard for mortars
after 1550. The idea of firing shells from long naval guns was not new.
It had been proposed on and off since there had been shells and naval
guns to combine. Probably the most serious unfruitful proposal was in
1765, by Bigot de Morogues, one of the more influential naval writers
and thinkers of the 18th Century. The French did, eventually, conduct
tests with shells fired from heavy 24- and 36-pounder naval cannon.
These began at Toulon in 1789 and moved to Meudon in 1790.
|