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25th July 06, 03:33 PM
#1
Cannon Balls
This was in the local paper today. I decided to post it because I'm sure there are collecters out there who have no idea Civil War era cannon balls can still explode. I've examined the ones I have and they're all solid shot.
Source- Daily Citizen News 7/25/06
Collector hurt when cannonball explodes
Kim Sloan
kimsloan@daltoncitizen.com
Lawrence Christopher, who has collected and sold Civil War artifacts for almost 25 years, was seriously injured Monday when a cannonball he was trying to defuse exploded, officials said.
Christopher was working in an outbuilding at his home at 4773 Tammy Drive in eastern Whitfield County when the explosion occurred, deputies said. He was airlifted to Erlanger Medical Center in Chattanooga where he was listed in critical condition Monday night.
Danny Higgins, who lives and works across the street, said he heard a loud explosion and saw a large piece of debris flying through the air. He ran to Christopher’s house with other neighbors.
“When I heard it, it didn’t dawn on me what had happened because we hear noise like that all the time around here,” Higgins said. “Everyone was trying to help him but you really couldn’t do nothing.”
Lt. Nancy Chadwick with the sheriff’s office said Christopher, known in some circles as the “Godfather of relics,” was drilling a hole in the cannonball to remove the gunpowder when the accident occurred.
Other explosive material was found at the home and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation’s bomb squad was called in Monday evening to determine if it should be removed or detonated.
Local Civil War historian Marvin Sowder said even though some cannonballs and other projectiles may be close to 150 years old, they can still be as unstable as the day they were made. He said he was not familiar with the process used to defuse a cannonball.
“I always thought they did it remotely,” Sowder said. “I wouldn’t want to be too close to one.”
Sowder said Christopher is very knowledgeable about Civil War artifacts and artillery. Christopher has a Web site where he lists artifacts for sale, www.cw1861.com. Known as “Lawrence of Dalton,” he is referred to on another dealer’s site as “the Godfather of relics.”
“I was just out there two weeks ago and he had got in some really, really big cannonballs about a foot in diameter,” Sowder said. “That’s his livelihood.”
Christopher has contributed several items to the Tunnel Hill Heritage Center, a museum that displays Civil War and railroad memorabilia. Recently, Christopher donated an old railroad emergency kit, Sowder said.
“He’s just a real good guy,” Sowder said.
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