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By CivilWarTalk
Published: September 19, 2006
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  • Type: 8-inch Parrott Seacoast Rifle, 11 rifle grooves
  • Year of Manufacture: 1861
  • Tube Composition: Iron
  • Bore Diameter: 8 inches
  • Standard Powder Charge: 16 pounds
  • Projectiles: 150 lb. bolts
  • Tube Length: 162 inches
  • Tube Weight: 16,000 lbs.
  • Effective Range (at 35°): 8,000 yards
  • Invented By: Robert P. Parrott
  • Registry Number: 6
  • US Casting Foundry: West Point Foundry, NY
  • Current Disposition: Cadwallader Park in Trenton, N.J.
  • Special Notes: The "Swamp Angel", which fired from the marsh near Morris Island into Charleston, burst on the 36th shot, throwing the breech off.

In the summer of 1863, Fort Sumter, after two years of being pummeled by federal artillery, still defiantly protected the city of Charleston, SC. Union Gen. Quincy A. Gillmore, stationed on Morris Island at the entrance to Charleston Harbor, wanted to locate a battery to fire on the city so that he could force its capitulation without having to capture the harbor forts. On August 2, Gen. Gillmore ordered the construction of a battery at a site 4.5 miles from the city.

The battery and parapet were constructed of 13,000 sandbags weighing more than 800 tons; 123 pine timbers measuring 15 to 18 inches in diameter and 45 to 55 feet long; 5,000 feet of 1-inch board; 9,500 feet of 3-inch planking; 1,200 pounds of spikes, nails, and iron; and 75 fathoms of rope. On August 17, the platform received its gun- a 16,700-pound Parrott rifle made at New York State's West Point Foundry. It was immediately christened with "Swamp Angel". With an 8-inch-diameter bore, 11-foot bore depth, and a 16-pound powder charge, it was capable of firing a 150-pound projectile the 8,000 yards to the heart of Charleston.

On August 21, Gillmore sent a message demanding that Confederate Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard, commander at Charleston, immediately evacuate the Rebel posts on Morris Island and Fort Sumter or suffer the shelling of the city. Receiving no reply by midnight, Gillmore ordered the shelling to begin. The gun had been carefully sighted on the steeple of St. Michael's Church, and at 1:30am on August 22, the first shot was fired. Alarm bells and whistles were heard immediately. Fifteen more shots were fired before daylight, 12 of them filled with an incendiary fluid known as "Greek Fire".

The next night, August 23, 20 more shells were fired at the city. On this night a number of the shells exploded inside the gun, causing the breech reinforcing band to come loose on the sixth shot. The gun continued to be fired, with the crew of the gun taking cover outside the gun emplacement on each shot. On the last discharge, the Swamp Angel burst, the breech being blown out of its reinforcing band, and the gun thrown to the top of the parapet. Three men were injured in the explosion, but not seriously. No other guns were placed in the battery. The physical damage to Charleston was minimal, and its citizens remained defiant.



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