Yes Brad welcome to the board, glad to have you.
I would go withthe brass and build a nice cannon. Later if you want to you can build a larger gun.
Even if you get the brass at a discount you are still going to have some money tied up in. You want make that money well spent. So don't get in a hurry. Do your research and them decide what you are going to make. Fireman don't make big money so unless you have a shop full of equipment or access to a shop full of equipment you are going to have farm some of the work out. It might take a while to build but it will be worth while if done right. Some thing like this can become a family heirloom.
If you need a cannon builder look at the top of the board for the Cannon Resource list an the first post is our Sponsors. Contact them and see what they can do for you.
Do not decieve yourself, if you build or have built a nice cannon out of this piece of brass, sooner or later you will want to fire a projectile. Or later when it passes on, someone down the road will want to fire a projectile. So build it for the heaviest possible use. The safety Rules of N-SSA and AA dictate a mimumum wall thickeness equal to the caliber of the gun. The maximum bore probably should be 1.25 after machining.
Without doing the math the guns that come to mind that you could build are a Danial King howitzer, carronade or a Mountain howitzer.
This piece of metal is also a prime candidate for a golf ball or billiard ball mortar.
Any of the cannons will give you a loud report, loud enough to serve the purpose. The mortar will be more muffled but a bunch more fun to especially with light reasonable loads. all these guns will have muzzle blast when fired. Build a proper foil wrapped cartridge and they will make all the noise you need. Bigger gun, bigger noise, bigger cost to make, bigger powder bill.
We have a whole crop of new guys coming on the board and we are glad to have you all. So I guess it's time to pitch Matt Switliks book.
Shooting cannons is not like shooting a big over sized muzzleloader. There is a completely different set of internal ballistics involved. Read up on cannon shooting before you acquire a cannon. Suggested reading is
THE MORE COMPLETE CANNONEER By M.C. Switlik with selected excerpts from other artillery manuals The book can be ordered from these two suppliers by clicking on these hotlinks: