Hi, there, I'm wondering if anyone can point me in the direction of any primary sources that might substantiate the story of the "Old Sow", a 32-pound cannon used in the first battle at Sackets Harbor on July 19, 1812. Several nineteenth-century histories say that the residents of Sackets came up with the name after seeing the cannon lying half-submerged in mud along the shoreline. Originally destined for the Oneida, the cannon was set aside in 1810 by Lieutenant Melancthon Woolsey as too cumbersome and unwieldy aboard that vessel. Resurrected as part of a shore battery in 1812, but without appropriate shot available, the defenders of Sackets wrapped 24-pound cannonballs in carpeting to make it fit. When a 32-pound ball arrived on shore from a British gun, it was picked up, loaded and fired back, raking the Royal George and inflicting calamitous damage and many casualties and convincing the Brits to flee the scene. Accounts include references to British sailors laughing at the incompetence of American artillerymen in the early stages of the battle and a band on shore sending off the Brits to the tune of Yankee Doodle. The stories have been labeled apocryphal by some, and I'd like to be able to determine exactly what was fact and what was fiction about the encounter. Steve Benson