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April, 1863 AD (search for this): article 2
en some interesting statistical tables descriptive of the different kinds of missiles thrown at Fort Sumter, and other matters connected with the protracted bombardment, a brief summary of which will doubtless prove acceptable to our readers.--The missiles embrace almost every description of shells, shrapnel, bolt and shot, from 10 to 23 inches in length, and from 3½ to 15 inches in diameter. The heaviest shot fired weighed 425 pounds. A classification of the shot fired by the enemy from April, 1863, to February 21, 1864, shows the following results. From monitors, 1,443, land guns by day, 14,235; land guns by night, 4,402; mortars, 7,167; total, 27,247; of which number 20,216 struck, and 6,964 missed. Yet, shattered and crumbling under the hailstorm of iron hurled against it, the energy and skill of Southern engineers has raised a new fort like a Phœnix from the debris, whose resistive strength defies the utmost malice of the foe. The weight of metal fired by the enemy against the
February 21st, 1864 AD (search for this): article 2
statistical tables descriptive of the different kinds of missiles thrown at Fort Sumter, and other matters connected with the protracted bombardment, a brief summary of which will doubtless prove acceptable to our readers.--The missiles embrace almost every description of shells, shrapnel, bolt and shot, from 10 to 23 inches in length, and from 3½ to 15 inches in diameter. The heaviest shot fired weighed 425 pounds. A classification of the shot fired by the enemy from April, 1863, to February 21, 1864, shows the following results. From monitors, 1,443, land guns by day, 14,235; land guns by night, 4,402; mortars, 7,167; total, 27,247; of which number 20,216 struck, and 6,964 missed. Yet, shattered and crumbling under the hailstorm of iron hurled against it, the energy and skill of Southern engineers has raised a new fort like a Phœnix from the debris, whose resistive strength defies the utmost malice of the foe. The weight of metal fired by the enemy against the fort is estimated a