The fort was originally named after John C. Calhoun, President Monroe's Secretary of War, who was a southern secessionist. That wouldn't do once the Civil War started and the North renamed it Fort Wool in 1862, after Major General John Ellis Wool, a War of 1812 , Mexican War hero and now Civil War officer as commander of Fort Monroe.
The fort received its first guns now. Initially there were 10 guns mounted. These guns were fired at Confederate positions across Chesapeake Bay and at Confederate ships.
A long-range experimental cannon, the Sawyer gun, was installed at Fort Calhoun in mid-1861. The weapon was rifled and had much longer range and accuracy. An illustration in an August 1861 newspaper shows it mounted on a high-angle carriage.
--Old B-Runner
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