[Hey, I found an Internet connection!]
We’re (still) back at the Perryville reenactment for two more days …
While we were visiting with some of the folks in the horse-drawn artillery unit, we walked with a couple of them to meet another artillery unit and see their pieces, which were on display but not being used.
Over the course of the day, we learned that a unit of horse-drawn artillery would’ve had six or eight cannon, each pulled by six horses. As you’ve seen in the previous artillery photos, each cannon is attached to a limber (the front wheels of the four-wheeled device) with a box on top. That box carries the cannon’s ammunition (thirty-nine shells in the case of the twelve-pound howitzer we saw).
Each cannon, then, would’ve been accompanied by a second horse-drawn limber with a caisson attached, and each caisson carried another two boxes of ammunition. As you can see here, a spare wheel was carried on the back of the caisson.
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Portions of this particular limber and caisson are original, and it has all sorts of nooks and crannies and carrying cases for a spare pole, an ax, a hatchet, etc.
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Each unit also had its own blacksmith, who would’ve had a setup like this:
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October 23, 2012 at 4:54 am
Like a pop up story book, the California Historical Artillery Society (CHAS) reaches out and captivates audiences around the nation with its horse-drawn Artillery Detachments. CHAS has been recognized for supplying the first horses to set hooves on Angel Island State Park since the US Army ceased utilizing equines so many decades ago, for providing the only horse drawn Caisson for funerals outside of Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, and for participating in historical festivities throughout the nation. CHAS is a non-profit, educational organization dedicated to preserving the life and times of historic artillery. CHAS has been recognized as the most authentic and highly trained horse drawn artillery unit in the country, second only to the present day United States Army’s permanent demonstration detachment at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.