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  • Auction Catalog #4092
  • Lot #231
Lot #230
Lot #232

Lot 231: Civil War Phoenix Iron Co. Model 1861 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle

Historic Documented 1862 Dated Civil War Phoenix Iron Co. Model 1861 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle Identified as Used by Battery F of the 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery with Carriage

Auction Location: Bedford, TX

Auction Date: August 23, 2024

Lot 231: Civil War Phoenix Iron Co. Model 1861 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle

Historic Documented 1862 Dated Civil War Phoenix Iron Co. Model 1861 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle Identified as Used by Battery F of the 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery with Carriage

Auction Location: Bedford, TX

Auction Date: August 23, 2024

Estimated Price: $40,000 - $60,000
Price Realized:
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Historic Documented 1862 Dated Civil War Phoenix Iron Co. Model 1861 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle Identified as Used by Battery F of the 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery with Carriage

Manufacturer: None
Model: None
Type: Other
Gauge: 3 inch
Barrel: 64 inch round
Finish: black
Grip:
Stock:
Item Views: 2452
Item Interest: Very Active
Serial Number:
Catalog Page: 240
Class: Other
Description:

The 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle, Model 1861 was one of the primary field artillery pieces of the Union Army during the Civil War and were also prized by the Confederacy when they could capture them. It could accurately fire a 10lb round 1,830 yards and could fire solid bolts, case shot, shells, or canister as needed. This example has a pinched front sight post and is marked "TTSL No 379 PICo 1862/816" on the muzzle (Inspector Theodore Thaddeus Sobieski Laidley, No. 379, Phoenix Iron Company, 816 lbs. weight). "US" is marked on top over the trunnions. The original sight base for the Pendulum Hausse sight is present. An included copy of a July 25, 1864 Battery Report for Battery F of the 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery (Ricketts' Battery) lists this gun by number as the sixth of the battery's six guns and indicates it fired 499 rounds during the last quarter and had fired 1,299 rounds in total to that date. 325, 375, 378 and 379 were likely the replacements issued to the unit in September 1862 given the other two guns on the battery report were no. 42 and 64 and from 1861. The unit had defended Henry House Hill at Second Bull Run and was also part of the "artillery hell" at Antietam. #378 from Ricketts' Battery is discussed in the article "Historic 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle from Ricketts' Battery" by Ron Rupp in the included copy of Artilleryman Magazine Volume 37 No. 3. He located the tube on display in York, Pennsylvania, at Hanover Junction and discusses the report noted above and the unit's history including their famous defense of East Cemetery Hill on the evening of July 2, 1863, at Gettysburg. General Johnson sent 6,000 men in an assault on the hill that they later termed "Battery Hell" while another 1,295 under General Hays attacked the right flank and another 1,244 under Colonel Avery hit the left. Fire from R. Bruce Ricketts' Battery tore many of the assaulting Confederates to pieces, but some of the Confederates reached the battery. The artillerymen then fought to defend their guns while the remainder of the battery kept on firing. Rupp notes, "It can be claimed Ricketts' battery served as the 'High Water Mark' on East Cemetery Hill when the crest of the Confederate attack broke on Ricketts' center section, [and] then receded downhill as Federal reinforcements arrived." The fighting was fierce. The Confederates managed to spike the piece on the far left after its crew was all either killed, wounded, or taken as prisoners. One of the Confederate officers that broke through was struck in the head with a stone by an artilleryman when he demanded he surrender at musket point. Lt. Brockway stated, "The scene was now one of the wildest confusion. Friends and foes were indiscriminately mixed, and our means of handspikes, rammers, stones, etc., made a sturdy resistance, animating each other with shouts and cries, 'to conquer on the soil of our native state or perish.'" The Confederates were forced to retreat after taking heavy losses, and the fighting continued the next day. On July 3, the battery suffered under enfilading fire from Benner's Hill and Seminary Ridge and repositioned to focus their fire on the former. When the battle was over, they had lost six killed, fourteen wounded, and three missing. During the battle, they fired 1,200 rounds, more than 200 rounds per gun in a less than 24 hour period. The gun would have seen use in the Overland Campaign in the Spring of 1864 in the Wilderness and at Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, and Siege of Petersburg. In addition to documented Civil War use by a famous battery, this piece was professionally relined with a 3/8 seamless liner by Bernie Kurdt and has been fired recently at the North-South Skirmish Association Nationals in Winchester, Virginia. The 2021 NSSA registration for it is included. Also include are a copy of the Artilleryman Magazine Volume 37 No. 4, a reproduction No. 1 field carriage by Stafford Wheel & Carriage, LLC, two rammers, a worm, and a handspike.

Rating Definition:

Very fine as restored and relined with nearly all of the black paint remaining and mild overall wear. The carriage and accessories are excellent with minor wear. This is an incredibly historic Civil War 3-Inch Ordnance Rifle used by Ricketts' Battery, a unit famous for their defense of East Cemetery Hill During the Battle of Gettysburg.



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