Special Notes: This gun is one of four 3-inch ordnance rifles of Battery A, 2nd U.S. Artillery that today stand at the base of the Buford monument at Gettysburg, on the spot where they fired the opening artillery salvo of that pivotal battle.
The John Buford Statue can be found on the Chambersburg Pike in the Gettysburg National Battlefield Park. It stands facing westward toward the position of the advancing Rebel army postion of July 1, 1863. When a design for the Buford statue was under discussion in 1888, John Calef, the commander of Horse Artillery Battery "A" under Buford's command, suggested that the design incorporate four Ordnance Rifles that were in the battery. Included in his suggestion was gun number 233, the same gun that fired the first Union artillery shot of the battle. The Army Cheif of Ordnance tracked down all four guns and donated them to the monument design committee. During the dedication ceremony of the John Buford statue on July 1st, 1895, Major John Calef sybolically spiked all four tubes.
The Gettysburg "Opening Gun" Plaque Reads:
THE FOUR CANNON GUARDING THE BASE OF THE STATUE BELONGED TO HORSE BATTERY "A" 2nd U.S. ARTILLERY. THIS PIECE WAS THE OPENING GUN OF THE BATTLE FIRED FROM THIS SPOTUNDER THE PERSONAL DIRECTION OF GEN. BUFORD, JULY 1, 1863.