Showing posts with label Fort Sumter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Sumter. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
Saturday, October 14, 2017
'Hidden' Fort Sumter: History comes alive in Charleston
This weighty chunk of a Civil War cannonball was spotted on rocks outside Fort Sumter. (CLICK ON ALL IMAGES TO ENLARGE.) |
Thanks to Fort Sumter historian emeritus Richard W. Hatcher III, CCWP president Bob Zeller and vice president Garry Adelman, who led an excellent tour, history came alive at the massive fortification where the Civil War erupted on April 12, 1861. On a special day, the old, brick fort gave up some of its secrets.
beyond the sign (pan right). Click at upper right for full-screen experience.
'THE BEST SHELL CRATER'
THREE UNEXPLODED PARROTT SHELLS
Fired by Union artillery, this Parrott shell is buried deep in a thick wall. |
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Probably fired from nearby Morris Island, this shell juts from a wall. |
The unexploded Parrott shell in Fort Sumter's wall is not believed to be a danger to detonate. |
Hatcher III talks about the most exposed Parrott shell.
ORIGINAL BRICKS, ANYONE?
REMNANTS OF THE ORIGINAL WHARF
Ships once docked here at the fort's original wharf, which extended about 140 feet into the harbor. |
A CANNONBALL IN A MOST UNLIKELY PLACE
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A massive cannonball peeks through a ventilator shaft at the site of the fort's magazine. |
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