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Stirling Observer Article by Murray Cook on the cannons of Stirling

Stirling Observer · 13 Mar 2019 09:44 Murray Cook


There are two on Mote Hill, two at the bottom of Broad Street and two at Cowane’s Hospital.



The paintwork on all of them has over the years been worn away by the thousands of children who have clambered over them.


These weapons of war were not attempts to control an unruly population but celebrations

of Stirling’s military connections.


While the Mote Hill and Broad Street canons were `Army surplus’, the Cowane’s pair are

military booty, captured from the Russian Empire during the siege of Sebastopol in 1855,

the key event of the Crimean Campaign.


This war was made famous by Tennyson’s poem The Charge of the Light Brigade, which

describes the valour of British light cavalry as they rode to certain death following poor decisions by commanding of­ficers.


As the poem famously states: `... Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs

but to do and die.’


Both cannons feature the double-headed eagle of the Romanovs, the Czars of the Russian

Empire.


The symbol is ancient and goes back to the Byzantium Empire (the eastern Roman Empire)

which only finally fell in the middle of the 15 century.


It is sometimes said that the cannons were made by the Carron Ironworks in Falkirk and

sold to the Russians.


While they were landed at Grangemouth, they were certainly made in Russia. However, this

legend has some truth in it as the company supplied weapons to the early United States of

Murray Cook on the cannons of Stirling


America and these were used against British troops in the 1812 war, when we famously set

fire to the White House.


And the son-in-law of one of the founders of the ironworks, Charles Gascoinge, who also

managed the factory, added to the tale of Carron cannon being used against British troops.

He left in 1786, before the company’s success became obvious, to re-organise – at the invitation of the Csarina, Catherine the Great – the production of iron and cannon in Russia,

taking trade secrets with him.


He did not return, but then again, he would not have been welcome had he done so.



SEMPER Scotland has come across the Town Council Minutes of the Royal Burgh of Stirling 1847-1864 discussing the Captured Russian artillery guns brought as trophies of war to Stirling, 16 February 1857 (page 434); 20 April 1857 (pages 441-442); 22 May 1857 (pages 445-446).



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