Item #12639 Civil War Heavy Artillery Rodman Cannon Tintype Photograph, circa 1860s. Rodman Cannon Tintype.

Civil War Heavy Artillery Rodman Cannon Tintype Photograph, circa 1860s

Photograph

Photographer unknown, Rodman cannon tintype photograph, circa 1860s, documents one of the most important classes of heavy artillery used by the United States during the Civil War and in nineteenth-century coastal defense. The image supports research into Union ordnance technology, military engineering, and the visual culture of large-scale artillery deployment. Rodman guns, developed under the direction of ordnance officer Thomas J. Rodman, marked a major expansion in American heavy weapons design, and photographs of these guns preserve direct evidence of how such artillery was presented, maintained, and understood in relation to the men who worked around it.
Half plate tintype photograph, image approximately 4.5 x 7 inches, showing three men posed on and beside a large Rodman cannon mounted on a wheeled rail-supported carriage. The gun’s immense barrel dominates the composition, with its pronounced rounded breech and upper vent area clearly visible. The carriage rests on a circular rail track designed to allow the piece to be traversed for aiming, a system associated with fortified coastal positions and heavy defensive artillery. One man stands beside the carriage while two others are seated or leaning along its structure, their bodies providing a clear sense of the cannon’s scale. Their caps and work clothing suggest artillery personnel or laborers engaged with the weapon and its mounting rather than a purely studio portrait setting.
Rodman guns were introduced in the 1850s and became central to American heavy ordnance during the Civil War, especially in siege and harbor defense contexts where large-caliber smoothbore cannon were required to fire explosive shells against ships and fixed fortifications. This photograph is valuable not only for the weapon itself but for the relationship it establishes between industrial-scale artillery and the human figures tasked with operating it. The image records mid-nineteenth-century military technology in a direct and legible form, with the rail carriage and posed attendants making the engineering purpose immediately visible. Minor surface wear and edge rounding consistent with nineteenth-century tintypes; overall good condition. A strong documentary image of Civil War era heavy artillery and the material scale of Union ordnance production.

Item #12639

Price: $480.00

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