Winans Steam Gun

Winans Steam Gun

Winans Steam Gun after capture, from May 18, 1861 issue of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper
Type Centrifugal Steam Gun
Place of origin  Confederate States
Service history
Used by  Confederate States
Wars American Civil War
Production history
Designer Charles S. Dickinson
Designed 1858
Manufacturer Unknown
Produced 1860
Number built 1

The Winans Steam Gun was a steam-powered centrifugal gun used during the American Civil War, which used centrifugal forces (rather than gunpowder) to propel projectiles.

Description

Similar in size to a steam-powered fire engine of the day, the gun had a menacing appearance thanks to a large curved shield covering its inner workings.

Its mechanism involved a shielded barrel that rotated up to 250 times per minute. Shot dumped into the top of the barrel rolled down into it, and were held back by a spring-loaded gate that opened to allow one shot to be flung out per revolution of the barrel. Despite the effort invested in the project, it was unable to match the accuracy or power of the gunpowder weaponry of the time, and thus the steam gun project was abandoned.

History

The weapon grew out of work by Ohio inventors William Joslin and Charles S. Dickinson on a hand-powered centrifugal gun, which they patented in 1858 - one of many 19th century attempts to harness “centrifugal” force – whether produced by hand or steam power. After the two had a falling out, Dickinson promoted the device under his name, patented his own version a few months later, and found funding to build a steam-powered gun in Boston in 1860. He brought the device to Baltimore and demonstrated it for the City Council in February, 1861. The machine was supposedly capable of shooting 200 projectiles in a minute.

In the wake of the April 19, 1861 clash between a pro-Southern mob and the 6th Massachusetts Infantry in Baltimore, Maryland, word spread of an allegedly powerful steam gun said to have been invented and built by noted Maryland industrialist and states' rights advocate Ross Winans to oppose Federal troops passing through Baltimore to Washington in response to President Lincoln's call for volunteers.

The gun was taken from Dickinson and/ or his associates by City Police to be put in readiness for use if needed. Available evidence suggests that it was taken to the foundry/machine shop of Ross Winans and his son Thomas who the city’s Board of Police had hired to make pikes, shot and other munitions items. Shortly after, the gun was taken from the Winans’ facility and publicly displayed with other weapons being gathered by city authorities.

In the excitement of the times, Ross Winans' public involvement in states' rights politics in Maryland, his great fortune, word of the munitions work being done at his factory for the city, city defense appropriations, and the appearance of a menacing looking gun that had emerged from his factory became mixed in the press, and were carried in papers across the country.

The Steam Gun defended the Thomas Viaduct for the remainder of the Civil War after capture

After calm returned, the gun was taken again to Winans' shop for repair at city expense, then returned to Dickinson, who then attempted to take it to Harper’s Ferry to sell to Confederate forces. Union forces captured the gun and its handlers, intact, in mid journey on May 11, 1861 at Ellicott Mills, Maryland and took it to their camp at Relay, Maryland.[1]

While not a party to the attempt to escape with the gun, press accounts linking him to it, his pro-states' rights politics, rumors of munitions making for the South, and the real munitions work he had undertaken for Baltimore authorities led to Ross Winans’ arrest and brief detention by Federal forces. He was released after 48 hours, after agreeing that he would not take up arms against the government.

Following its capture, the gun was tested by mechanically inclined members of the 6th Massachusetts Infantry, before being sent North, via Annapolis, Fortress Monroe, and eventually to Lowell, Massachusetts, where it was presented to a mechanic's organization, where it remained as a curiosity before falling to the scrappers long after the war.

While it consumed considerable amounts of paper and ink during the turbulent spring of 1861, the steam gun made no contribution to the war, and was soon forgotten except by Civil War historians.

Replicas

In 1961, a full-scale replica was built by Mark Handwerk, Joseph H. Clark and Joseph Zoller III for the Centennial of the Civil War. The gun is on outdoor display on the median of US. Route 1 in Elkridge, Maryland.[2]

References

  1. Joseph R. Mitchell, David Stebenne. New City Upon a Hill: A History of Columbia, Maryland. p. 23.
  2. Mike Radinsky (28 November 2010). "Huge Civil War-Era Gun A Curious Piece of Elkridge History".
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