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68-pounder Lancaster gun
British 19th century cannon / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
68-pounder Lancaster guns were a British rifled muzzle-loading cannon of the 1850s that fired a 68-pound shell.[1] It was designed by Charles William Lancaster.[2] The cannon was designed with an oval bore and had a range of about 6,500 yd (5.9 km).[3] The gun had a tendency to burst and jam.[4][2]
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"A Quiet Day in the Diamond Battery", 15 December 1854, by William Simpson. Depicts naval guns deployed ashore in the Crimean War.
They were fitted in pairs to the Arrow-class gunvessel and were used during the Crimean War.[1][2]
The muzzle of a Lancaster gun survives in the collection of the Royal Armouries at Fort Nelson.[2]