An Incredible and Historic Napoleonic Wars Battle Site Recovered Exploded Solid Shot 12 Pounder Cannon Ball An Incredible and Historic Napoleonic Wars Battle Site Recovered Exploded Solid Shot 12 Pounder Cannon Ball An Incredible and Historic Napoleonic Wars Battle Site Recovered Exploded Solid Shot 12 Pounder Cannon Ball An Incredible and Historic Napoleonic Wars Battle Site Recovered Exploded Solid Shot 12 Pounder Cannon Ball

An Incredible and Historic Napoleonic Wars Battle Site Recovered Exploded Solid Shot 12 Pounder Cannon Ball

Battle field recovery. With less than 50% remaining, the ball has hit its target, and split asunder.
Within the ball is an air pocket which may explain its split in two on impact.

Thomas Blomefield, as Inspector-General of Artillery, introduced a new system of Ordnance from 1784 onwards. His system of gun tubes was based around two standard lengths: that of 17 calibres and that of 13. Seventeen calibre tubes were used for the 'heavy' or 'long' pieces with the 'light' and siege/garrison guns having tubes of 13 calibres. The calibre of all 12-pounders was 4.623 inches.

Blomefield designed three types of 12-pounder, each being specialised towards a particular function. The heavy 12-pounder was used in garrison and siege work; the medium was used in the field and the light for the horse artillery. As the Napoleonic wars progressed, however, the medium 12-pounder became the sole weapon of its class.

The medium 12-pounder had a gun-tube that was 6 feet 6.66 inches in length and it weighed 18.0 cwt; an example cast by John and Henry King in 1795 at the Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds, has a length of 6 feet 3 inches and a weight of 18 cwt 9lb. A medium 12-pounder also survives with its original block-trail carriage in Montreal. The Royal Artillery used 12-pounder field guns in almost all of their major operations and furthermore it was used by the Royal Horse Artillery. See; Wellington's Big Bang: the British 12-pounders By Anthony Leslie Dawson

Code: 21295

245.00 GBP