Incendiary Spike Shot Physical Object


Accession Number
1986.008.0996
Creation Date
circa 1620
Materials
Description
Round ball with a pointed spike protruding from either end.
Dimensions

29.8 x 10.9 x 10.7 cm.

Exhibition Label
Case Caption (2023):

Defending The Ship

Spain’s fleets were always in danger. English, French, and Dutch privateers, as well as pirates of all nations, lurked in the Atlantic. If they could not capture the whole fleet, they might well seize a straggler. Both the Nuestra Señora de Atocha and the Santa Margarita were guard galleons—heavily-armed ships ready to defend the flotilla against all comers.

The galleons’ cannons, capable of delivering powerful broadsides, were the first line of defense. Gunners were highly skilled. They would have started out as common sailors, but they received additional pay when they gained expertise.

Aboard the Atocha, Captain Garcia de Nodal was in charge of the ship’s company of soldiers. They were experienced infantrymen, seasoned in Spain’s endless wars, and they considered themselves superior to the sailors as a result. Despite this attitude, some of them decided to learn seamanship. While they would refuse to help with menial tasks, such as scrubbing the deck, they were often knowledgeable enough to help raise the sails. In times of battle, they might assist with the cannon before hand-to-hand fighting broke out.
Object Caption (2023):

Incendiary Cannon Shot
Iron (c.1620)
Gift of Jamestown Inc.
1986.008.0996

This type of shot was heated red-hot and loaded in the cannon with layers of wet wadding to prevent it lighting the gunpowder. Once fired, it could stick in the hull of a ship, setting it on fire.