LEGACY Bankhead Battery 12-pound Field Gun -- Confederate Park, Memphis TN
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 35° 08.816 W 090° 03.259
15S E 768357 N 3893310
One of four replica Confederate cannons at Confederate park, and one of two assigned to the Bankhead Battery. The Civil War originals were donated to the US during scrap metal drive in 1942. UPDATE: Removed in Dec 2017
Waymark Code: WMNK2T
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 03/26/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
Views: 4

UPDATE 29 JAN 2018: In 2013 the City of Memphis renamed this park Memphis Park. Four years later in Dec 2017, The City of Memphis sold this park to a nonprofit. The nonprofit removed all the Confederate memorials and has renamed the park Four Bluff Park.

ORIGINAL WAYMARK:

The waymarked gun is a 12-pounder Field Gun of the kind used by the Bankhead Battery. Raised by local lawyer Smith Bankhead, this battery was the first CSA artillery battery raised in Memphis.

When standing in the center of Confederate park looking at the four cannon that are arranged right to left, the waymarked cannon is the one farthest to the right towards the old US Customshouse.

Blasterz are a little sick when they think about historic Civil War cannon being given away to b melted down in a WWII scrap metal drive, but we realize it was a different time and a different national mood in 1942.

After the end of WWII, four WWII-used cannon were given by the US back to the city of Memphis to be installed in Confederate Park. Sixty years later, those 1940s-vintage cannon were removed and replicas of the original Civil War-era cannon were reinstalled, after a multi-year fundraising effort mounted by the local Memphis chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Steen Cannons made the replica guns: (visit link)

"Cannons for Confederate Park, Memphis

During the Civil War, or more aptly named The War for Southern Independence, there were cannons stationed here on this ground in Confederate Park in downtown Memphis, and after the war some surplus Confederate cannons were placed in the park. These were later donated by the City to the WW2 scrap drive (1942). After that war, surplus WW2 cannons were placed in the park but these have now been removed, allowing for the return of replica Civil War cannons to be placed there.

The N. B. Forrest Camp 215, Sons of Confederate Veterans, has undertaken a fund-raising drive to return four replica Civil War cannons to Confederate Park. The cannon tubes (barrels) will be supplied by Steen Cannon & Ordnance Works. The four replica cannon will represent two of the many significant artillery batteries that were raised in Memphis at the outbreak of the War Between the States.

The first artillery unit raised was Bankhead’s Battery. This unit was formed May 8th, 1861 by Memphis attorney Smith P. Bankhead. It included four cannon: two 6lb field cannons and two 12lb field howitzers. These were manufactured by the Quinby & Robinson Company of Memphis.

The officers of this battery were also attorneys : 1st Lieutenant W. Y. C. Humes, 2nd Lt. J. C. McDavitt, 2nd Lt. William B. Greenlaw, 2nd Lt. William L. Scott.

The unit served at such engagements as Shiloh, Stone’s River, Chickamauga, Missionary Ridge, Atlanta & Franklin. Smith Bankhead eventually rose to the rank of general, and district chief of artillery. After the war he returned to Memphis and became Deputy Attorney for the city.

Two of the replica cannons placed in Confederate Park, which is next to the Univ of Memphis School of Law, appropriately represent Bankhead’s Battery.

The second significant artillery unit raised in Memphis was the Appeal Battery. Sponsored by Memphis’ daily newspaper, The Appeal, (later the Commercial Appeal), the battery was mustered into service by Capt. W.C. Bryan on May 6th, 1862. Ten members of the staff of the Appeal, half the employees, joined the battery.

The unit was issued four cannons in Memphis: two 3? Iron Ordnance Rifles and two 12lb bronze field howitzers. These likely came from the Quinby & Robinson Company of Memphis.

The unit served gallantly at the battle of Corinth, Miss. and Vicksburg, Miss, among others.

This battery was reactivated during World War I and served with distinction in France.

Cannons representing the famous Appeal Battery will be one of the additions to the historical setting of Confederate Park.

Steen Cannon and Ordnance Works is providing four new decorative cannons to the park; two 12-pounder field howitzers that were originally made by Quinby and Robinson of Memphis and one 6-pounder of the 1841 style and marked Quinby and Robinson and one 3-inch ordnance Rifle."

Here is an article about the return of the historic replica cannon from the Memphis Commercial-Appeal: (visit link)

"Civil War look returns with cannons at Memphis Confederate Park
Kevin McKenzie
12:00 AM, Sep 6, 2012

Just in time for the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, four cannons resembling those used during the War between the States were installed in Confederate Park in Downtown Memphis on Wednesday.

Just as intended, the replica artillery immediately sparked a discussion rooted in history, in this case, between 62-year-old, bearded twin brothers born in a former hospital that served as Confederate headquarters in Vicksburg, Miss.

"To me, it's a six-pound Napoleon," said David Hoxie, insisting that one of the new cannons is a type named after a grandson of French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte.

"It's not," said his brother, Danny Hoxie. "It's a six-pound gun," he insisted.

The Hoxies were two of several members of the Nathan Bedford Forrest Camp, Sons of the Confederate Veterans group that paused in nearly 100-degree heat while two 12-pound field howitzers, a three-inch ordnance rifle and the six-pound field gun were bolted in place at the park overlooking Mud Island and the Mississippi River.

"It's a six-pounder," said Allen Doyle, commander of the Forrest Camp, settling the disagreement between the brothers.

Doyle, 58, an insurance agent, provided more of the history that the cannon are meant to inspire.

"We want to make sure that people knew that Memphis was not defended by original cannons, but they were commemorated here after the war was over and the park (dedicated in 1908) was established here," he said. "There were actually six guns in the park, much larger than this, but this is as close as we could get."

In 1942, during World War II, the city donated the surplus Civil War cannons originally at the park to a scrap metal drive. After that war, six World War II cannons, now stored and slated for renovation, replaced them.

Led by the local Sons of Confederate Veterans, and including the Shelby County Historical Commission and the Riverfront Development Corp., the project to return more appropriate cannons took about a decade and was financed with about $72,000 in private donations, said Lee Millar, chairman of the project.

The cast iron carriages supporting the new cannon reproductions were donated by Shiloh National Military Park, the Tennessee site of a bloody battle in April 1862. Lee Cole, a 53-year-old Arlington blacksmith helping to install the cannons, said the national park is replacing aging carriages with sturdier ductile iron.

Steen Cannons, a family-owned company in Ashland, Ky., made the new cannons and stays busy supplying artillery representing a variety of wars to national parks, towns, cemeteries and other customers, said Marshall Steen, 60, company owner. During the Civil War, carriages were wooden, he said.

The cannon types at Confederate Park represent those used by two Confederate artillery units — Bankhead's Battery, formed in 1861 by Memphis attorney Smith P. Bankhead, and the Appeal Battery, sponsored in 1862 by The Appeal newspaper (an ancestor of The Commercial Appeal) — according to Millar.

However, there were no Confederate cannons overlooking the bluffs at the park on June 6, 1862, when eight cotton-clad Confederate boats were defeated in 90 minutes in a naval battle with eight ironclad Union ships.

"There was a four-gun field battery that was here, but they left and had gone to Shiloh by then," Millar sa
What type of artillery is this?: 12-pound Field Gun

Where is this artillery located?: Park

What military of the world used this device?: United States and Confederate States Artillery Units

Date artillery was in use: 04/15/1861

Date artillery was placed on display: 09/06/2012

Cost?: 0.00 (listed in local currency)

Artillery is no longer operational: yes

Still may work: no

Are there any geocaches at this location?:
no


Parking location to view this Waymark: Not Listed

Visit Instructions:
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