with grapeshot ammunition]]
Grapeshot is a type of anti-personnel ammunition used in naval cannons. It was similar to its land cousin canister shot, although its slugs were much larger to punch through the hull of ships. Instead of solid shot, a mass of loosely packed metal slugs is loaded into a canvas bag. Grapeshot can also be improvised from chainlinks, shards of glass, rocks, etc. When assembled, the balls resemble a cluster of grapes (hence the name). On firing, the balls spread out from the muzzle at high velocity, giving an effect similar to a shotgun, but scaled up to cannon size.
Grapeshot was devastatingly effective against massed infantry at short range. It was used to savage massed infantry charges quickly. Cannons would fire solid shot to attack enemy artillery and troops at longer range (although the shrapnel shell was invented to increase the effect of grapeshot at a distance) and switch to grape when they or nearby troops were charged.
Grapeshot was largely replaced by canister shot during the early 19th century, with the cloth bag being replaced with a wood-sealed metal canister, guided by a wooden sabot. This improved effective range, provided more controlled dispersal, and allowed the shot to be safely fired at higher velocity.
Conflicts in which grapeshot was infamously and effectively used include:
*The noted pirate Bartholomew Roberts (popularly known as "Black Bart") was killed by a blast of grapeshot from HMS Swallow on February 10, 1722.
Battle of Culloden - 1746, Jacobites under Bonnie Prince Charlie vs. British forces under the Duke of Cumberland
Battle of the Plains of Abraham - 1759, Marquis Louis-Joseph de Montcalm was mortally wounded in the abdomen by grape-shot.
Kazimierz Pułaski was injured, and later died, from a grapeshot-inflicted wound in the Battle of Savannah during the American Revolutionary War.
Battle of Guilford Court House-1781, when Cornwallis ordered two grapeshots to be fired into the middle of a battlefield, where hand-to-hand combat between the British and Continental Army was taking place.
13 Vendémiaire - Napoleon, then a brigadier general during the later stages of the French Revolution, famously dispersed a Royalist mob on the streets of Paris with a "whiff of grapeshot" on 5 October 1795. He was rewarded with the command of the Army of Italy in 1796, and his victories at the battles of Lodi, Castiglione, Arcola and Rivoli provided a springboard for his military and political ambitions.
During the Haitian Revolution, grapeshot was used by French troops against the victorious troops of Toussaint Louverture.
During the Irish Rebellion of 1798, grapeshot was widely used by British forces against Irish forces, notably in the battles of New Ross, Arklow, Saintfield and Vinegar Hill. At the Battle of Vinegar Hill the British used grape shot to kill hundreds of women and children who were fleeing the battlefield.
Battle of Borodino, 1812—Prince Mikhail Kutuzov (Russia) v. Napoleon Bonaparte (France)
British commander Sir Edward Pakenham was fatally wounded while on horseback by grapeshot fired from the earthworks during the Battle of New Orleans.
At the Battle of Waterloo (1815) The Earl of Uxbridge was hit in the leg by French grapeshot, the leg was amputated and The Earl of Uxbridge was commended for the injuries he sustained and his bravery in the battle.
In Victor Hugo's novel Les Misérables, grapeshot was the weapon used against the barricades in the 1832 insurrection in Paris.
During the Battle of Buena Vista (Mexican-American War) in 1847, General Zachary Taylor effectively employed a double load of grapeshot for his artillery in defeating a numerically superior Mexican army led by Santa Anna. His famous order, "double shot your guns and give them hell", became the campaign slogan that later won him Presidency in the White House.
Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War in 1863, Union forces effectively used canister shot in repulsing the massed Confederate advance known as Pickett's Charge, a key stage in the battle.
Since the passing of muzzle-loaded cannon and the introduction of the fixed round, grape has been replaced by canister or case round, where a brass cartridge contains the shot.
See also
Beehive
Canister shot
Shrapnel shell
Shotshell, functionally identical small arms ammunition fired from a modern shotgun
Salvo
Category:Artillery ammunition
Category:Projectiles