Bomb squad members gingerly removed this round from the battlefield (NPS photos) |
“It is an archeological
artifact and has been turned over to the National Park Service,” Cobb County Police spokesperson Officer Shenise Barner
told the Picket in a recent email.
A team
working on a trail project at Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park in
late February found the Parrott shell during a metal detecting survey. The NPS’s Southeast Archeological Survey said it “had a percussion fuse
that did not ignite when it hit the ground.”
While police and the park would not indicate whether the shell was intact when it was returned by the bomb squad, their
responses to Picket questions left the impression it may have been.
“The shell was returned to Kennesaw Mountain National
Battlefield Park (KEMO) as soon as the bomb squad rendered it inert and
safe, which was approximately two weeks ago,” Chief Ranger Anthony P. Winegar
wrote in late May.
Winegar was the trail team member who dug open the area containing the
Parrott round, which was about 10 inches deep.
“No modifications were made to the shell
other than what was necessary by the bomb squad to render it safe. Live
munitions and explosives are rendered inert by removing all explosive compounds,”
he recently wrote. “As stated before, the National Park Service (NPS) treats
all munitions with extreme caution. The preservation of human life always
takes precedence over the preservation of even the rarest museum objects.”
After he
uncovered the ordnance, Winegar called the Cobb
bomb squad, which took it away. A subsequent social media post about the find by Join Cobb Police brought a crescendo of concern about the shell’s fate, with
some saying it could be easily and safely neutralized.
The page responded:
"The bomb squad stated that they would love nothing more than to preserve
this piece of history, however there is no way to safely render it without
counter charging it. They try to use the smallest charge appropriate. This
charge is very small and will perforate the case. Unfortunately, even small
amount of live explosives can set the whole shell off."
Given that,
it appeared the round would be destroyed in the process. In March, Barner told the Picket the ordnance was collected by the bomb squad for
safe keeping.
The Picket remained in touch with the park and Barner in the past couple
months. While they responded, answers were measured, possibly indicating
the sensitivity of the topic.
When asked by the Picket on how the round was handled and whether it was
soaked in water or its powder removed, as some experts suggested, Barner said: “We
have no additional information to provide on this incident, and we can't
disclose the practices and techniques to render inert any explosive compounds.”
Some historians, munition experts and others have questioned why it might be necessary to destroy or damage the item.
"Absolute travesty to destroy this historical object. These are
easy to make inert," wrote one person on the Join Cobb Police Facebook
page. Jack Melton, publisher of the Artilleryman Magazine, told the Washington Post that a solution was dipping the round in water.
“These shells used paper fuses and black powder, which is not unstable,” he told The Post. “Black powder becomes inert when it gets wet. Given that it was found 10 inches below the surface, it probably already is inactive. I’m sure it got wet from rainwater more than a few times in the past 157 years.”
Winegar and Cobb County police have stressed safety is the absolute
priority.
“KEMO does not yet have a plan for what it
will do with the shell,” the chief ranger said. “The Park has
several inert Parrott shells in its museum collection, including a shell
identical to the one found (Feb. 28.)”
Federal and Confederate forces tangled at Kennesaw Mountain and nearby sites from June 19 to July 2, 1864. A
large frontal assault by Union Gen. William T. Sherman failed on June 27.
Combat over several days produced about 4,000 casualties in the campaign to
take Atlanta.
Artillery played a major role in the fighting, according to the NPS. Sherman,
eliminating the element of surprise, launched a barrage from below the mountain
on June 27 before the assault.
Parrott guns were a mainstay during the war; here one at Gettysburg (Wikipedia) |
Among the guns used at Kennesaw Mountain was the 10-pounder
Parrott rifle, which had a range of nearly two miles.
When asked how the round came to be in the location, Winegar said in March: “I can only say that orientation of the artifact in situ would indicate
that it came from the Confederate line towards the Union line. Based on the
depth it is possible that it was fired and impacted, likely short of its
intended target, and did not detonate. That, however, is speculation.”
At the time, he indicated the round would be “disrupted” – meaning it would be hit with
a charge to render it safe. The park would then take custody of the remaining pieces.
“This is
common practice involving potentially unstable unexploded ordinance
(UXO) that is not a rare item. Rarer pieces may be treated differently so
that the intact piece is not lost. This does not appear to be a rare item.”
Subsequent responses by police and the park have not indicated the shell is now in pieces, but there was no confirmation of its current appearance.
Another view of the Parrott artillery round (NPS) |
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