
Mountain Howitzers
Posted by:
gparkes
N 35° 05.763 W 106° 40.186
13S E 347801 N 3884970
In the center of "Old Town" Albuquerque, New Mexico, is this historic marker.
Waymark Code: WMAAKE
Location: New Mexico, United States
Date Posted: 12/13/2010
Views: 17
The Marker is located in the town square at the heart of "Old Town" Albaquerque. The text on the marker states:
Mountain Howitzers
Cast in the foundry of Cyrus Alger & Company of Boston, Massachusetts, and originally designed to be mule-pack artillery, the Model of 1835 12-Pounder Mountain Howitzer was the smallest U.S. cannon of the period and could fire a 12-pound exploding shell to a distance of 1000 yards. It was a light field piece of great mobility and intended for use in all kinds of rough terrain.
In early April 1862, Civil War Confederate forces that had invaded New Mexico Territory began their retreat back to Texas following defeat at Glorieta Pass, east of Santa Fe, two weeks earlier. Confederate artillery commander Major Trevanion T. Teel buried eight cannon barrels near this Plaza to preven their capture by pursuing Union forces.
Twenty-seven years later, Major Teel returned to Albuquerque to show local citizens where the cannon barrels were buried. On August 19, 1889, all eight barrels were excavated from a chile pepper patch, formerly a corral, some 500 feet northeast of San Felipe de Neri Church, near the present day Albuquerque Museum of Art and History. Two of the baarrels have remained in Albuquerque.
Local residents made new carriages for the two remaining cannon barrels and displayed them on the Plaza for many years. Because of the great value of the original barrels, replicas were later made and replaced the originals on the Plaza. These replica barrels are mounted on "Prairie" style gun carriages -- most likely the configuration used by Confederate forces in New Mexico. It is sometimes said that these two mountain howitzers "guard" the Old Town Plaza. They represent a proud and inportant era in Albuquerque history.
The original mountain howitzer barrels and other artifcats from the New Mexico Camaign of the Civil War are on display at the Aluquerque Museum of Art and History, two blocks northeast of this Plaza.