Artillery Profile: 6 pdr. Smoothbore Field Gun By CivilWarTalk Published: October 30, 2006 PrintEmail
Type: Smoothbore gun
Rarity: Common to Uncommon
Years of Manufacture: 1841 to 1863
Tube Composition: Bronze or cast iron
Bore Diameter: 3.67 inches
Standard Powder Charge: 1.25 lbs.
Projectiles: 6 lb. round balls
Tube Length: 60 inches
Tube Weight: 884 lbs.
Effective Range (at 5°): up to 1,523 yards
No. in North America: approx. 700
Special Notes: Workhorse of Mexican War, but considered obsolete by Civil War
The 6-pounder field gun was a lightweight, mobile piece that was a favorite of the field artillery in the first half of the nineteenth century. This popular workhorse of the Mexican War era was regarded as superseded by the Union artillery, but was still heavily employed by a Confederate army that could not afford to pass up any opportunities.
This gun shows the last vestiges of the highly decorated artillery profiles that had prevailed until the beginning of the century: breech band, cascable fillet, fillet and roundel at the throat, and an echinus on the muzzle face were also features of the M1841 12-pounder. All were dispensed with on the M1857 Napoleon that displaced both these weapons as the smoothbore of choice for both armies. Attempts to convert some of these guns to rifles, using the James system of rifling, had only marginal success.