Town marshal helps drag cannon downtown and fire it with socks stuffed with powder.
During the Civil War, the Army sent four cannons to Oregon, one of them to Jacksonville. It never fired in a war, but figured often at Fourth of July celebrations in Jacksonville, Ore., and the Grand Army of the Republic, a fraternal organization of Civil War Veterans, took it to their annual encampments.
In 1904, the veterans held a meeting in Jacksonville. When in the middle of the night residents heard the firing of a cannon, no one thought it anything more than over-boisterous Grand Army of the Republic members.
The next morning, the veterans awoke to a missing canon, and the U.S. Hotel and other downtown buildings had shattered windows. The cannon sat in the middle of the street. It turned out that jokesters under the unlikely supervision of the Town Marshal had dragged the cannon to the street and fired it, after loading it with six or eight pounds of powder stuffed in socks.
Business people in town were not amused, so one of the cannon vandals paid the hundreds of dollars in damages to door frames, plaster and windows.
Source: "Jacksonville Sensation." Ashland Tidings, 26 Sept. 1904, p. 3.
The SOHS Library is OPEN to the public at 106 N. Central Avenue in Medford, with FREE access to the SOHS Archives, from 12:00 - 4:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. Appointments are not necessary. Please contact library@sohs.org, or call 541-622-2025 ex 200 to ask questions or request research.
Vandals Fire Civil War Cannon Downtown
Episode
3241
Date