A GEORGE III METAL-MOUNTED AND STAINED-BEECH MODEL OF A CARRONADE
A GEORGE III METAL-MOUNTED AND STAINED-BEECH MODEL OF A CARRONADE

BY WINLAW OF CAVENDISH SQUARE

Details
A GEORGE III METAL-MOUNTED AND STAINED-BEECH MODEL OF A CARRONADE
By Winlaw of Cavendish Square
The curved front with square hinged port lined to the inside with metal and the turned carronade on a sliding platform, with a set of removable steps, on a plinth base, the top with a metal plaque 'Gift of the CARRON COMPANY TO LIEUT GEN MELVILL Inventor of the Smasher & Lesser Car ronades for solid ship shell & Carcass shot & Co First used against French ships in 1770' and , with maker's stamp 'WINLAW ENGINE MAKER IN MARGARET STEET CAVENDISH SQURE W1'
16 in. (40.5 cm.) high; 20 in. (52 cm.) wide; 11 in. (30 cm.) deep

Lot Essay

The Carron Company of gun founders began casting guns in Falkirk, Stirlingshire in 1761. The factory's most famous class of ordnance was the carronade, of which the present lot is a presentation model, designed by General Melville and/or Charles Gascoigne. The carronade, also known as 'the smasher', was a short barrelled ship's cannon capable of firing heavy gauge and heavy weight shells. The size of the cannon meant that they could be carried by smaller ships, greatly increasing their fire-power. This was of particular importance to the British Navy, with its large number of smaller ships, in competition with the French whose fewer ships carried more guns.

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