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Showing posts with label cannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cannon. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 April 2011

He's heading up Tuesday's artillery salvo

Lancaster County, S.C., resident Claude Sinclair intends to start a war on Tuesday. At exactly 6:45 a.m., the 61-year-old social worker will order troops to bombard Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor - for the second time in 150 years. • Article

Saturday, 12 March 2011

Cannonnball detonated in Virginia

A Napoleon 12-pound artillery shell that could be from the Civil War era was found at Fort Lee, south of Richmond, Va., and explosives experts were called in to detonate it. • Article

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Vandals damage cannons at Wilson's Creek

Park rangers at Wilson's Creek National Battlefield west of Springfield, Mo., are actively looking for vandals who damaged four civil war cannons. • Article

Thursday, 13 January 2011

Family ties 4: Your Civil War stories

The Picket is sharing readers' accounts of their ancestors who served or were affected by the Civil War. We encourage you to get involved by e-mailing us at pgastjr@comcast.net. David Walker, who grew up in Atlanta and now lives in Canton, Ga., provided this account of a relative with connections to pieces of Georgia history.

My great-great-grandfather Thomas Bailey was born Oct. 13, 1839. at Ross Landing Ga. outside of Chattanooga, Tenn. With the family he moved to Athens, Ga. in the early 1850s, where he began a life long career in fabrication with the Athens Steam Company(renamed Athens Foundry and Metal Works).

Grandfather Bailey joined the Confederate Army in July of 1862 and served with the Adams’ Battalion, which appears to be part of the Athens Reserve Corps, Georgia Infantry, until April of 1865. While serving, he is accredited with the casting of the double-barrel cannon designed by John Gilleland, an employee of Cook’s Armory and a private in the Mitchell Thunderbolts also a unit in the Athens Reserve Corps.

The double-barrel cannon can be seen sitting in front of City Hall in Athens today.

On April 26, 1900, in Athens he was given the Southern Cross of Honor for service in the army of the Confederacy.

Also, Thomas Bailey owned and operated the Bailey Foundry and Metal Works located on Thomas Street in Athens, which fabricated the “Arch” seen on the campus of the University of Georgia and other decorative iron pieces for homes and businesses which can still be seen today. Later in life, he worked with his sons in the hardware business in and around Athens.

Thomas Bailey passed away Jan. 29, 1922, at the age of 83 and was considered one of Athens’ oldest and most highly esteemed citizens at that time.

He is buried in the Oconee Hills Cemetery across from Sanford Stadium.

Thursday, 2 December 2010

'History Detectives' looking into cannon

Does a vial of metal shavings in fact contain metal from one of the Confederacy's most famous guns? That's the question that the cast and crew of PBS' "History Detectives" television series are trying to answer during their visit to Charleston, S.C. A cannon known as "Old Secession" was fired on Dec. 20, 1860, to mark the state's new Ordinance of Secession, and an antiques dealer asked the series to determine if his shavings came from that gun. • Article

Monday, 26 April 2010

Re-enactors hurt in cannon mishap

Two re-enactors were injured when an artillery piece fired prematurely at an event in Plymouth, N.C. • Article

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Bomb squad checks out cannon ball

The Paducah (Ky.) Police Department Bomb Squad responded to a call from Daniel McKendree about a cannon ball that he moved from his parents' yard on Kentucky Avenue. McKendree moved the ball to his home on Clay Street and thought it might be a live ordnance. • Article