Original Item: Only One Available. This excavated Confederate 3 inch Broun shell is in very good condition and still retains a complete sabot. This fine Confederate shell has been disarmed, has no repairs, and is ready for display. It will be an excellent addition to any excavated Civil War artillery or general relic collection. Approximate weight is 8.1 lbs and the length is approximately 7 inches.
Unloaded or dummy grenades, artillery shell casings, and similar devices, which are cut or drilled in an BATF-approved manner so that they cannot be used as ammunition components for destructive devices, are not considered NFA weapons. This example is in total compliance and is NOT AVAILABLE FOR EXPORT.
Broun projectiles are named after their inventor, Lieutenant Colonel William Leroy Broun (commander of the Richmond Arsenal beginning in June 1863), who modified the then-popular Read projectiles. Examples with a copper time fuze plug are uncommon. Most Broun projectiles recovered, such as this example, had a wooden fuze plug fitted for a paper time fuze. The copper sabot would have been about .90 ” high and had two saw cuts to help aid in the expansion in the rifling of the cannon. The sabots were nearly always blown off during firing, such as on this example. The sabot ring was cast into notches in the exterior of the base, which proved to be a less than effective method of attachment.
William LeRoy Broun was born in Loudoun County, Virginia in 1827 and died in Auburn, Alabama, January 23, 1902. He was educated in private schools and at the University of Virginia, where he graduated in 1850. He taught for a year in a private school in Virginia, for two years (1852-54) in a small college in Mississippi, and for two years (1854-56) as professor of mathematics in the University of Georgia. He then taught in a private school until the outbreak of the War of Secession. He rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Ordnance Department of the Confederate army. Colonel Broun made many inventions while in the Ordnance Department. At the close of the war he was elected professor of natural philosophy of the University of Georgia, and from 1872-75 was president of the Georgia Agricultural and Mechanical College, a branch of the University. He was professor of mathematics in the University of Texas, 1883-84, and president of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute (A. and M. College, now Auburn University) 1882-83, and from 1884 to his death in 1902. It was the last named institution that the great work of Dr. Broun was performed. He was a good executive and a practical educator, and under his supervision the Alabama Polytechnic Institute became a pioneer and a model for all Southern technical schools.
General George E. Pickett and Dr. William LeRoy Broun were descendants of William Pickett, whose will, dated September 26, 1766, was recorded in the clerk’s office of Fauquier County, Virginia, November 24, 1766.
DIAMETER: 2.94 inches
GUN: 3-inch rifle
LENGTH: 8 3/16 inches
WEIGHT: 9 pounds 2 ounces
CONSTRUCTION: Shell
SABOT: Copper ring
FUZING: Confederate copper fuze plug, paper time fuze