CONFEDERATE 3.00 INCH BROUN SHELL FROM PHILADELPHIA MOLLUS MUSEUM

$1,250.00 SOLD

Quantity Available: None

Item Code: 1052-06

The origins of the Civil War Library and Museum date back to 1865 just after the Civil War ended when veteran officers of the United States Army, Navy, and Marine Corps gathered in Philadelphia to form the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States ("MOLLUS") as the first chartered Civil War institution in America.

In 1888, the organization incorporated as the War Library and Museum to preserve its members’ military and personal items in perpetuity.

Over the course of time, The Civil War Library & Museum was renamed twice including as the Civil War and Underground Railroad Museum of Philadelphia and most recently as the Civil War Museum of Philadelphia. On August 2, 2008, the Civil War and Underground Railroad Museum of Philadelphia permanently closed its building at 1805 Pine Street in anticipation of moving to The First Bank of the United States building on 3rd Street between Chestnut and Walnut Streets. That move never took place and ultimately the Civil War Museum's vast collection was entrusted to the stewardship of the Gettysburg Foundation and the National Constitution Center.

The Civil War Museum of Philadelphia, owned what many believed to be the largest inventory of Union Army materials outside of government stewardship. The Civil War Museum had a priceless collection of treasures that included 7,000 original photographs, a library of approximately 13,000 volumes, and over 2,900 artifacts that included firearms, edged weapons, uniforms, paintings, accouterments, flags, and other artifacts related to the "War of the Rebellion."

The Civil War Museum of Philadelphia served as the oldest chartered Civil War institution in the country, and its Museum on Pine Street previously offered three floors of exhibits from 1922-2008.

The shell is in very nice condition. The fuse has been removed for deactivation and the exterior surface is mostly smooth with some very light scattered pitting. The upper bourrelet is perfectly visible just below the nose.

The brass sabot is complete but does show signs of having been fired with rifling marks visible. The underside of the sabot has a strip of white paint with a museum accession number of “86.1.5.”

Bottom center of the shell has the usual lathe dimple.

Location of recovery is not known.  [ad] [ph:L]

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