Battery Brannan: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' ( | {{PageHeader}} | ||
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1902-1944) - Battery John Brannan is a concrete [[Endicott Period]] mortar battery located on [[Fort Worden]], Jefferson County, Washington. Named in G.O. 194, 27 Dec 1904, for Brevet Major General [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Army/USMA/Cullums_Register/1081*.html John M. Brannan], U.S. Army, Colonel, [[4th U.S. Artillery]], who served in the [[Mexican-American War]] and the [[U.S. Civil War]], and who died 16 Dec 1892. The Battery was begun in 1899, completed in 1901, and transferred to the Coast Artillery for use on 16 Jun 1902 at a total cost of $81,051.06. The mortars were dismounted in 1944 during [[World War II]]. | |||
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[[Image: | [[Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA Panorama.jpg|795px|thumb|left|Battery Brannan Mortar Pit A Panorama]] | ||
[[Image: | [[Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB Panorama.jpg|795px|thumb|left|Battery Brannan Mortar Pit B Panorama]] | ||
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- | == [[Endicott Period]] (1890-1910) == | ||
== {{ | {{HDPuget Sound}} Designed to protect both the Straight of Juan De Fuca and the Admiralty Inlet to Puget Sound. | ||
Designed to protect both the Straight of Juan De Fuca and the Admiralty Inlet to Puget Sound. | |||
This Battery and [[Battery Powell (1)]] originally was built as one large mortar battery housing sixteen 12" M1890MI mortars on M1896MI carriages in a concrete battery with four mortar pits (A-D). The original battery was split into two batteries in 1908, mortar pits A and B became [[Battery Brannan]] and pits C and D became [[Battery Powell (1)]]. Each of the mortars was capable of firing a seven hundred pound shell nine miles and proved accurate enough to hit a moving practice target seven miles away in 1913. | |||
The four remaining mortars were removed in | {{Clr}} | ||
[[Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB 1910.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Battery Brannan Mortar Pit B, circa 1910]] | |||
The plotting room for Battery Brannan was located between mortar pits A & B in a separate building along the access road. An observation post was located at the top of the Battery on the right flank of pit A. Inside the walls of each pit is a "U" shaped corridor that was used to house the mortar projectiles and the separate powder bags used to propel them. Between [[Battery Powell (1)]] and [[Battery Brannan]] was an underground complex that had various uses over the years but was meant to contain the "war chest" of fuse materials for arming the projectiles. | |||
At the right rear of each mortar pit was a concrete "booth" that was used to communicate with the spotters and the plotting room and to relay the azimuth and elevation firing information to the gunners via slate boards. | |||
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{{PugetSoundMortarRemoval}} | |||
The four remaining mortars were removed from Battery Brannan in 1944, during [[World War II]]. | |||
{{FtWordenBatteryBrannan}} | {{FtWordenBatteryBrannan}} | ||
[[Image:FortWordenBatteryBrannan Plan.jpg|thumb|left|795px|Battery Brannan Plan]] | |||
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== Current Status == | == Current Status == | ||
Part of the [[Fort Worden]] State Park Conference Center. The Battery is accessible to the public and the rooms are clean and dry but empty. No guns or carriages are in place. | Part of the [[Fort Worden]] State Park Conference Center. The Battery is accessible to the public and the rooms are clean and dry but empty. Pit A is quite overgrown and the top of the battery is very overgrown making it difficult to access the observation posts. No guns or carriages are in place. | ||
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{| | {| | ||
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<googlemap lat="48.138893" lon="-122.768537" zoom="19" width="500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png"> | <googlemap version="0.9" lat="48.138893" lon="-122.768537" zoom="19" width="-500" height="-500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png"> | ||
( | (B) 48.138893, -122.768537, Battery Brannan | ||
(1899-1943) | |||
(1) 48.138798, -122.768183, Mortar position A-1 | (1) 48.138798, -122.768183, Mortar position A-1 | ||
( | (3) 48.13882, -122.768287, Mortar Position A-3 | ||
(1) 48.139115, -122.768845, Mortar Position B-1 | (2) 48.138877, -122.768148, Mortar Position A-2 | ||
( | (4) 48.138893, -122.76825, Mortar Position A-4 | ||
(1) 48.139115, -122.768845,Mortar Position B-1 | |||
(3) 48.139137, -122.768958, Mortar Position B-3 | |||
(2) 48.139192, -122.768816, Mortar Position B-2 | |||
(4) 48.13921, -122.768926, Mortar Position B-4 | |||
</googlemap> | </googlemap> | ||
|valign="top"| | |valign="top"| | ||
'''Location:''' Artillery Hill, [[Fort Worden]] State Park Conference Center, Port Townsend, Washington | '''Location:''' Artillery Hill, [[Fort Worden]] State Park Conference Center,<br>Port Townsend, Jefferson County, Washington | ||
{{Mapit-US-cityscale|48.138893|-122.768537}} | {{Mapit-US-cityscale|48.138893|-122.768537}} | ||
* Elevation: 239' | * Elevation: 239' | ||
|valign="top"| | |||
<br><br> | |||
'''GPS Locations:''' | |||
* {{GPSLinkLong|Lat=48.138893|Lon=-122.768537}} Battery Brannan | |||
|} | |} | ||
'''Sources:''' | '''Sources:''' | ||
* Fort Worden Guide, The Puget Sound Coast Artillery Museum, 2005, page 20-21 | * Fort Worden Guide, The Puget Sound Coast Artillery Museum, 2005, page 20-21 | ||
{{HBSuppPugetSoundWWII}} | |||
'''Links: ''' | '''Links: ''' | ||
* [http://www.sdphotos.org/ca/puget/worden/btrybenson/btrybenson.html Seacoast Defense Photos - Great Photos!] | |||
* [http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov Washington State Digital Archives] | |||
* [https://waparks.org/your-parks/virtual-tours/fort-worden-state-park/artillery-hill-home/fort-worden-battery-brannan/ Battery Brannan Virtual Tour] | |||
* {{CDSGBatteryLink}} | |||
'''References:''' | |||
* TM 9-456 - 12-inch Seacoast Material, 12-Inch Mortar M1890MI mounted on 12-Inch Mortar Carriage M1896MI and M1896MII 1942 | |||
{{FortID|ID=WA0035|Name={{PAGENAME}}}} | |||
{{Visited|19 Jul 2008}} | {{Visited|17 Jun 2009, 19 Jul 2008}} | ||
== | == Picture Gallery== | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA R Shot Gallery.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A Right Shot Gallery | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA R Obsn Entrance.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A Observation Post Ladder | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA R StoreRm-2.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A Right Storeroom | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA R StoreRm.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A Right Storeroom | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA Right-2.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A, Emplacement 1 | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA Booth.jpg|Battery Brannan Pit A Booth | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA L Latrine.jpg|Battery Brannan Pit A Left Latrine | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA L Shot Gallery.jpg|Battery Brannan Pit A Left Shot Gallery | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA L StoreRm.jpg|Battery Brannan Pit A Left Storeroom | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitA Left-2.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit A Emplacement 2 | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB Booth.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B Booth | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB L Latrine.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B Left Latrine | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB L ShotGallery.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B Left Shot Gallery | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB L ToolRm.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B Left Toolroom | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB L.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B Emplacement 2 | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB R ShotGallery.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B, Right Shot Gallery | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB R StoreRm.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B, Right Storeroom | |||
Image:Fort Worden Battery Brannan PitB R.jpg|Battery Brannan, Mortar Pit B, Emplacement 1 | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
{{PageFooter}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brannan}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Brannan}} | ||
[[Category:All]] | [[Category:All]] | ||
[[Category:Washington All]] | [[Category:Washington All]] | ||
[[Category:Washington Battery]] | [[Category:Washington Battery]] | ||
[[Category:Washington Jefferson County]] | |||
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] | [[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Endicott Period Battery]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Harbor Defense of Puget Sound]] | ||
[[Category:Coastal Battery]] | |||
[[Category:Coastal | |||
[[Category:Fort Worden]] | [[Category:Fort Worden]] | ||
[[Category:2009 Puget Sound Trip]] | |||
[[Category:2010 CDSG Meeting]] |
Latest revision as of 16:19, 12 August 2022
Battery Brannan (1902-1944) - Battery John Brannan is a concrete Endicott Period mortar battery located on Fort Worden, Jefferson County, Washington. Named in G.O. 194, 27 Dec 1904, for Brevet Major General John M. Brannan, U.S. Army, Colonel, 4th U.S. Artillery, who served in the Mexican-American War and the U.S. Civil War, and who died 16 Dec 1892. The Battery was begun in 1899, completed in 1901, and transferred to the Coast Artillery for use on 16 Jun 1902 at a total cost of $81,051.06. The mortars were dismounted in 1944 during World War II.
![]() ![]()
Endicott Period (1890-1910)Part of the Harbor Defense of Puget Sound. Designed to protect both the Straight of Juan De Fuca and the Admiralty Inlet to Puget Sound. This Battery and Battery Powell (1) originally was built as one large mortar battery housing sixteen 12" M1890MI mortars on M1896MI carriages in a concrete battery with four mortar pits (A-D). The original battery was split into two batteries in 1908, mortar pits A and B became Battery Brannan and pits C and D became Battery Powell (1). Each of the mortars was capable of firing a seven hundred pound shell nine miles and proved accurate enough to hit a moving practice target seven miles away in 1913.
![]() The plotting room for Battery Brannan was located between mortar pits A & B in a separate building along the access road. An observation post was located at the top of the Battery on the right flank of pit A. Inside the walls of each pit is a "U" shaped corridor that was used to house the mortar projectiles and the separate powder bags used to propel them. Between Battery Powell (1) and Battery Brannan was an underground complex that had various uses over the years but was meant to contain the "war chest" of fuse materials for arming the projectiles. At the right rear of each mortar pit was a concrete "booth" that was used to communicate with the spotters and the plotting room and to relay the azimuth and elevation firing information to the gunners via slate boards.
In May 1918 two mortars were removed from each pit leaving two mortars remaining in each pit. The mortars were removed because it proved difficult to load and fire four large mortars simultaneously and there was a requirement for mortars in the World War I European theater. Even with the removal of two mortars from each pit the rate of fire did not significantly drop. The mortars were prepared for shipment and transported on U.S. Barge #5 towed by the U.S. Steamer Wilson to Seattle with the intent of shipping them to the war zone in Europe. This shipment arrived in Seattle on 30 May 1918 with sixteen 12" mortars, two mortars from each mortar pit of the following batteries:
The four remaining mortars were removed from Battery Brannan in 1944, during World War II.
![]()
Current StatusPart of the Fort Worden State Park Conference Center. The Battery is accessible to the public and the rooms are clean and dry but empty. Pit A is quite overgrown and the top of the battery is very overgrown making it difficult to access the observation posts. No guns or carriages are in place.
Sources:
Links:
References:
Fortification ID:
Visited: 17 Jun 2009, 19 Jul 2008 Picture Gallery
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