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Swivel
Guns and Small Cannon
Swivel Guns
and Small Cannon include both
very heavy rifles, smoothbores, and small cannons.
The rifles and smoothbores, weighing as much as 33 pounds, could
not be practically fired from the shoulder. The swivel gun had a
bore diameter which could greatly exceed one inch.
The bore of swivel mounted cannon could exceed two inches.
Guns of this type could be heavily loaded with buckshot,
devastating to human flesh at close range, a single large ball,
multiple small balls, or any combination of these. Practically
every keelboat, and many of the larger skiffs were equipped with these
guns. On land these guns were
mounted at strategic locations along the walls of forts.
After the first few years of the fur trade in the Rockies, the use
of this type of gun in warfare was rare. However, these guns found
continuous use in signaling and for saluting and were regarded as a
necessity. Swivel guns could be given more dignity by mounting them
on makeshift carriages, and placing them within stockades or blockhouses.
Wheeled canon of the 4-pounder and 6-pounder size, although rare, did show
up in the mountains for the fur trade.
These guns were mounted on wheeled carriages, and were generally
limited to trading posts. General
William Ashley made history in 1827 by bringing the first wheeled vehicle
to the intermontane west, the vehicle being a carriage mounted cannon.
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