Hot Shot Furnaces*
By By Herbert E. Kabler, Chief, Historic Sites Division, Branch of
Historic Sites, and F. Hilton Crowe, Assistant Historical
Technician.
NEXT to the dungeon, no other feature at Fort Marion
National Monument elicits so many questions as does the hot shot
furnace. Visitors are interested in knowing when this old structure was
built, and why and how it was used.
Filled section of the moat at Fort
Marion Ntional Monument, St. Augustine, Fla. The hot shot furnace is
seen in the left middleground. (From a drawing by Samuel O. Smart.)
|
Hot shot antedates gunpowder itself. In 54 B. C., the
Britons launched heated clay balls into the tents of the invading
Romans with great effectiveness. With the advent of gunpowder there was
considerable hesitancy in using hot shot because of the great difficulty
in controlling the time of the explosion, but experimentation finally
developed a clay that separated the hot ball from the powder. In 1579,
the King of Poland successfully carried on a siege by employing hot
cannon balls in his guns. The use of heated shot became increasingly
important in coast defense, especially in the destruction of wooden
vessels. During the siege of Gibraltar in 1782 a part of Spain's fleet
was set on fire and destroyed by hot shot.
The heating of cannon balls first was accomplished on
open grates, a slow, wasteful, and dangerous method. A great advance
then was made with the development of the hot shot furnace which, in
1794, was used successfully at the mouth of the Rhône River.
Old hot shot furnace at Fort Morgan, Mobile
Point, Ala. The historic fort, a part of the chain of coastal defenses devised
in the early nineteenth century by Simon Bernard, has been made accessible to the
public through a coopertive program carried out by the National Park Service,
the Civilian Convservation Corps, and the Alabama Department of Conservation.
|
The furnace was brought to this country in the early
part of the nineteenth century. One of France's outstanding military
engineers, Simon Bernard, brigadier general under Napoleon Bonaparte,
was employed by the United States to make a survey for coastal
fortifications in the Southeast and his recommendations, which included
the latest advances in coast-line defenses, were presented to Congress
in 1817 and adopted. At Fort Pike and Fort Macomb, in Mississippi; Fort
Morgan, in Alabama; and Fort Jefferson and Fort Marion, in Florida, the
hot shot furnaces are still in evidence. At Fort Pulaski National
Monument, near Savannah, Ga., only the foundation of the furnace
remains.
The War Department in 1825 declared Fort Marion
useless for defense purposes, but in 1835, after the second Seminole
Indian War started, it recognized that the fort still possessed certain
military values. It built a water battery, installed a hot shot furnace,
and proposed the construction of shallow draft galleys for additional
defense. The Seminoles apparently were expected to attack from the sea.
The hot shot furnaces varied somewhat in size, the largest one being at
Fort Jefferson National Monument [on the Florida Keys in the Gulf of
Mexico, 70 miles due west of Key West]. If shot were placed in a cold
furnace, 1 hour and 15 minutes were required to bring them to a red
heat. Once the furnace was hot a 24-pounder shot could be brought to a
cherry red color in 25 minutes, the 32- and 42-pounders requiring a few
minutes longer. An unusual circumstance was that the balls expanded
under the heat but did not return to their normal size after
cooling.
Hot shot oven, Fort Marion National Monument.
|
Once the balls were cherry red or white hot, they
were taken from the furnace with iron forks, scraped carefully with a
rasp to remove scale, and carried in ladles to the cannon. The ladles
were formed of an iron ring, the interior of which was beveled to fit
the ball, with two wooden-handled arms inserted. Other implements were
needed at the furnace. There were pokers for stirring the fire, tongs
with circular jaws for taking up shot, rasps for scraping, an iron rake
for removing cinders from the ash pit, a tub for cooling heated tools, a
bucket, and a rammer with head covered by a circular plate of sheet
iron of larger diameter than the ball to remove clay from the bore of
the cannon when clay wads were used. Many of the implements were
furnished in twos so that one set could cool in the tub while the others
were in service. When the battery was in action it took three men to
serve the furnace and handle the tools.
In preparation for loading the projectile, the
gunners elevated the cannon muzzle; next they rammed home the cartridge
or powder bag. After the powder was seated, a dry hay wad was rammed
against it, then a wet hay or clay wad. The powder bag was pricked open
and primed through the vent and a wet sponge passed through the gun.
Finally, the hot shot was rolled in, packed with another wet hay or clay
wad, a match was applied to the touchhole, and the projectile was
launched.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Laboratories of Our History
The policy of preserving our growing heritage of
nationally significant historic sites, buildings, and objects for the
inspirational and educational benefit of the American people of today
and of tomorrow, has been enunciated and reaffirmed by Congress
as a prime obligation of our individual citizenship and of our
collective nationhood. Instructive examples of this policy of historical
conservation are afforded by the National Park Service of the United
States Department of the Interior in its protection of five famous
coastal fortifications which bear intimate association with vital stages
of our national development.
Fort Marion (Castillo de San Marcos) and Fort
Matanzas, at St. Augustine, Fla., proclaimed in 1924 as national
monuments, are venerable coquina-built strongholds which once were
symbolic New World outposts of Spain's Golden Age. Still well preserved,
they are the oldest existing fortresses built by white men in the United
States. Fort McHenry, a national monument and memorial shrine on the
waterfront of Baltimore, Md., withstood a fierce British attack during
the War of 1812 and inspired Francis Scott Key's Star Spangled
Banner. Fort Pulaski, at the mouth of the Savannah River, in
Georgia, and Fort Jefferson, situated on an island west of Key West,
Fla., are protected survivals of the chain of impressive brick
fortifications constructed on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts in the
nineteenth century to guard against invasion by sea.
All these proud citadels of the past, although
outmoded and abandoned as defensive works, nevertheless provide
illuminating pages of America's military record. It is across their
drawbridges and along their ramparts, rather than in the yellowing pages
of paper books, that yesterday's soldier walks with us most vividly
today and recounts the human story of his daily tasks, his nightly
vigils, his professional duties, and his private feelings.
A section of the moat, Fort Marion
National Monument.
|
The cartridges (the powder charge minus the ball) for
hot shot were little different from those used for ordinary projectiles,
being made of cannon cartridge paper or parchment well pasted to prevent
the powder's sifting out. Sometimes two bags were used, one within the
other. When clay wads were employed they were cylindrical in form, about
one caliber long, and well moistened. Wet hay wads were preferable,
however, and these were soaked in water for about 15 minutes, then
allowed to drip.
When wet hay was used, steam often issued from the
touchhole or vent as soon as the ball was rammed home. This was the
effect of the heat of the ball upon the water contained in the wad and
no danger resulted from it. It is said that the ball could cool in the
gun without firing the charge, but shots usually were fired as quickly
as possible to prevent the steam from dampening and injuring the
powder.
Shot oven at Fort Jefferson
National Monument.
|
The statement sometimes is made that the cannon ball
cooled in its passage through the air toward its objective. In reality
the contrary is true, for the temperature of the shot was increased by
friction with the air. According to the Ordnance Manual of 1861,
a red-hot shot retained sufficient heat to set fire to wood after having
struck the water several times.
Penetration of cold and hot shot into wood was found
to be equal under the same circumstances. Charges for hot shot were
reduced, however, to one-quarter or one-sixth the weight of the shot in
order that the ball might remain in the wood and not penetrate it
entirely or embed itself too deeply. It was discovered that fire was
communicated more rapidly and certainly when the ball did not penetrate
more than 10 or 12 inches, because at a greater depth communication with
external air was not sufficient for combustion.
With the invention of the iron-clad Monitor
and Merrimac during the War between the States, the days of
wooden battleships were numbered and the hot shot oven quickly became
obsolete. It is cold and defensively useless today, but it constitutes
nevertheless an interesting and suggestive historical object which, like
the catapult, the long bow, and the claymore, illustrates the continuous
evolution of military arms and equipment.
*From The Regional Review,
National Park Service, Region One, Richmond, Va. Vol. II, No. 2,
February 1939, PP. 11-13.
|