This blog grew out of my "Down Da Road I Go Blog," which was originally to be about stuff I was interested in, music and what I was doing. There was so much history and Civil War entries, I spun two more off. Starting Jan. 1, 2012, I will be spinning a Naval blog off this one called "Running the Blockade."
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Came Across Galena's Blakely Gun Again-- Part 1
In anticipation of the North Carolina Civil War seminar this Saturday, I am reading one of the speakers' books, Mark L. Bradley's "Last Stand in the Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville" and came across something that was familiar to me from earlier posts, the Galena, Illinois, Blakely cannon.
What makes it even better is that I have actually seen this cannon in Galena's Grant Park (General Grant lived in Galena before the war). It was Bradlley's description of the plaque on the gun that tipped me off.
Union General Sherman's first encounter with Confederate forces on his way to the Battle of Bentonville was at Cheraw, SC. After his forces drove Confederate General Hardee's forces away, they captured 25 pieces of field artillery. 5,000 rounds of artillery ammunition and 2,000 stand of small arms along with many other munitions.
One of these was the cannon at Galena. It is reportedly one of the cannons that fired at Fort Sumter April 12, 1861. Some even say it fired the first shot.
--Old Secesh
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I found that this gun was in Galena, Illinois on the internet. I knew of it before though, and the Galena website cites it. My ancestor is John Peyre Thomas who commmanded the Blakely gun during the attack on Fort Sumter. Post War Thomas reopened The Citadel in the 1880s. He was a graduate and wrote the school history.
He's noted in the webpage story on it.
https://www.galenahistory.org/research/civil-war/the-blakely-of-grant-park/
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