| The Shot Tower was a lead shot manufacturing facility in operation  from 1828 to 1892. Molten lead was dropped from a platform at the top of the tower  through a sieve-like device and into a vat of cold water. When hardened, dried  and polished, the shot was sorted into 25-pound bags, producing a total of 1,000,000  bags of shot a year–a number that could be doubled if necessary.Known originally as the Phoenix Shot, then the Merchants’ Shot Tower            and now the old Baltimore Shot Tower, the red brick tower was erected            in 1828. Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a signer            of the Declaration of Independence, laid its cornerstone. Over 234 feet            high, the Shot Tower was the tallest structure in the United States            until the Washington Monument in Washington, DC was completed after            the Civil War. This type of building was rare even during the 19th century            and today only eleven shot towers remain in existence. Of these four,            the Shot Tower is the most outstanding example. This National Historic            Landmark is also an excellent example of the simple elegance that can            be achieved in the design of industrial architecture. The Shot Tower is located at the southeast corner of Fayette and Front Sts. Once part of the Baltimore City Life Museums, the tower is currently not open to the public. | 
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