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| Capt. Key howitzer this week at the Atlanta History Center (Civil War Picket photos; click to enlarge) |
The so-called Capt. Key “No. 9” howitzer is in the corner of a new gallery featuring fascinating artifacts from the Atlanta Campaign and the July 1864 battles in Atlanta.
It joins many military items in the new exhibit. But more than half of the artifacts in "More Perfect Union" -- especially those linked to the slave trade, African-American troops and repercussions of the conflict -- have been acquired in recent years.
The gun,
manufactured in Boston in 1851 for the Arkansas Military Institute, had been on
loan for nearly 10 years to Pickett’s Mill Battlefield State Historic Site northwest
of Atlanta. It’s possible it was used to mow down Federal attackers there who
futilely charged through a ravine toward Confederates
waiting for them in strength.
“Captain Key's howitzer is one of the most important artifacts /stories we have going into the new exhibit,” Gordon Jones, senior military and historian at the AHC, told the Picket earlier this year about plans for the museum to bring the cannon back to Atlanta. “It'll be a cornerstone of the Atlanta Campaign area, right up there with the U.S. Army wagon, Confederate flag that flew over Atlanta, Cleburne sword, plus more new acquisitions.”
Jones was
referring to Confederate Capt. Thomas Key, whose Arkansas artillery battery
served in the division of legendary Maj. Gen. Patrick Cleburne.
The AHC in 2016 lent the gun to the state park as it prepared to
move the “Battle of Atlanta” cyclorama painting from Grant Park to the center’s
facilities in the Buckhead neighborhood
For the AHC
and history aficionados, the audacious Key and his four-gun battery are
remembered for being in the thick of things in numerous 1864 Atlanta Campaign
battles – Dalton, Pickett’s Mill, Peachtree Creek and Jonesboro, among others.
Yet this
bronze gun has a postwar history as interesting as its service during the war.
It had several homes and was vandalized while displayed outside in Grant Park.
Indignities included a broken cascabel, hacksaw marks and scores of
indentations.
The howitzer was subsequently stolen, turning up in a county south of Atlanta. The AHC eventually gained custody of the weapon and had it refurbished and placed on a carriage that was built in 1936.
Thomas Bailey, who makes and restores carriages and other artillery components, recalls working on the Key howitzer, which has an artillery shell jammed into its 780-pound barrel.
“It always
stood out to me how beat up it was,” said the owner of Historical Ordnance Works in Woodstock,
Ga. “Somebody tried breaking it up for scrap. There were saw marks on the
trunnion.” He estimates the barrel had about 60 marks from a sledgehammer.
The Key
battery howitzer was one of two cast by Cyrus Alger & Co. for the Arkansas
Military Institute. The number 9 is stamped on its muzzle face and the barrel
is marked with an eagle atop a globe.
At
Chickamauga, in September 1863, his superiors lauded Key for his gallantry and
effectiveness, saying that in the fiercest
part of the struggle he ran his battery by hand to within 60 yards of the
enemy's lines.
Key and his cannons played a large
part in the Confederate victory at Pickett’s Mill on May 27, 1864. Cleburne
ordered Key to place two guns to the right oblique to enfilade the
ravine.
It’s
uncertain whether number 9 was one of those two, but it certainly was among the
four battery guns there.
Federal
troops under Brig. Gen. William Hazen charged uphill in their attempt to take
the top of a ridge. Key’s howitzers were ready for them. The battery fired
about 182 rounds of spherical case and canister in two hours.
The Federal
army suffered about 1,600 casualties at the battle, compared to 500 for the
South.
On July 25,
1864, Key’s Battery was issued Napoleons captured from the Federals during the
Battle of Atlanta and number 9 was sent to the Macon Arsenal. The Napoleons
were considered a step up.
In his postwar book, Key wrote he regretted parting with
number 9, which had been with his men at Perryville, Missionary Ridge, Resaca,
New Hope Church, Peachtree Creek and other battles.
“So it cannot
be thought strange that I regret having separated from my command a gun that
has been my companion under such trying and bloody circumstances.”



















