T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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30.1 | Sharps and Spencer | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Sine titulo | Mon Aug 26 1991 14:21 | 34 |
| First of all, the Sharps arms used in the CW were not repeaters. All
CW Sharps weapons were sliding-block percussion breechloaders that used
a combustible linen cartridge. Sharps developed a model that used a
metallic cartridge, but these weapons were not put into production
until after the war, as "New Model 1866."
Some Sharps models had a modified lock with a (not very successful)
device for feeding special pellet primers called "Sharps' primes" from
a tube inside the lock; the general theory was that the user did not
then have to apply a cap.
Most prewar Sharps carbines, including John Brown's and those shipped
west as "Beecher's Bibles," were of caliber .54. The Sharps arms sold
to the Union forces during the war were almost all cal. .52.
It is possible that you've confused the Sharps with the Spencer cal.
.56 rimfire repeater, which was referred to by disgruntled Confederates
as the "horizontal shot-tower." In the Army's first 500-round trial of
the Spencer, in 1861, firing was as rapid as 7 rounds in 10 seconds.
Early Spencers were in cals. 36 and .44.
A colonel of the 41st Massachusetts said in a letter in 1863 that he
and some friends had shot at musket range, using a target 5 feet tall
by 18 inches wide, and that he had not missed once, putting one ball
through the center of the target and handily beating all the others.
He said the Spencer was admirable. Another officer said in a letter to
Spencer that the weapon was better than all other breechloaders he'd
seen.
The company that supplied ammo for the Spencer had a test rifle. After
they had fired over 16,000 rounds through it, pausing maybe three times
to clean it, they said it was as good as new.
-d
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30.2 | Straight on Sharps | ODIXIE::SMITHR | | Thu Jan 23 1992 12:23 | 15 |
| Pat,
Sharps did not make a repeater. Sharps made a a single shot breechloading
rifle and carbine. The repeaters that were used during the war were the
Spencer and the Henry. I do believe that the Sharps was either a .50 or a
.52 caliber.
The Spencer was a lever action, loading through a tube in the butt
stock. The Henry (later the Winchester '66) caliber 44-40 was what we
consider now as the repeater.
I hope that this helps
Regards,
Rusty
|
30.3 | .44 flat Henry | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Wed Jan 29 1992 14:30 | 17 |
| The Henry was not a .44-40, though the modern replicas are. The Henry
fired a cartridge called a ".44 flat Henry." It was a rimfire ctg.,
and quite anemic. It was virtually worthless at much over 100 yards.
The rifle, itself, was quite accurate and reliable.
The scene in "Dances with Wolves" where Costner drops a charging
buffalo at a couple hundred yards with a Henry is fanciful, at least.
AT that range, I believe the buff's hump hair would have stopped that
trundlin' little round.
The .44-40, on the other hand, can be reloaded into a very fine
cartridge. The stuff you buy in the stores is pretty wimpy because the
ammo makers know that a certain number of people will shoot it in
great-granpa's black powder Colt. Properly reloaded, though, it is a
great round.
Wess
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30.4 | Wimpy, wimpy, wimpy! | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Magister dixit | Thu Jan 30 1992 21:34 | 21 |
| Yeah, the Henry was anemic all right, at least by long-arm standards.
Some stats:
Weapon Bullet Weight Muzzle Vel. Muzzle Energy
---------------------- -------------- -------------- -------------
Henry .44 rimfire 200 grains 1300 fps 750 ft-lb
Remington .44 revolver 135 grains 900 fps 242 ft-lb
Remington .58 Zouave 505 grains 1150 fps 1488 ft-lb
These numbers are give or take a little; I haven't actually played with
this ballistics stuff since '77, and these weights and velocities are
from memory of back then, when I was shooting my two replica Remingtons
quite frequently. I never owned a Henry, but I sure wanted one!
Advertising of the time would have you believe that the Henry was
anything but a wimp. An advertisement by John. W. Brown, the agent in
Columbus, Ohio said, and I quote: "Penetration at 100 yards is 8
inches; at 400 yards, 5 inches; and it carries with force sufficient to
kill at 1,000 yards." I have to wonder, penetration of what? Jell-O?
-dick
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30.5 | Roach-icide? | ELMAGO::WRODGERS | I'm the NRA - Sic Semper Tyrannis | Tue Feb 04 1992 14:20 | 8 |
| Penetration was generally measuared on soft white pine. I'd sure like
to see that bullet get through that much pine at those ranges. I'd
also like to know what that bullet would kill at 100 yards. Maybe he
was talking about the "best case" scenario viz Jeff Cooper's
observation that, "You don't have to hit a man very hard in the eye to
kill him."
Wess
|
30.6 | What type would Buford's men have had? | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Wed Nov 30 1994 09:24 | 6 |
| I know this topic hasn't seen much action in a while, but I was curious
as to what type of "repeating carbine" Buford's troops might have had
at Gettysburg?
frank
|
30.7 | Will Check, Unless Somebody Knows | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:07 | 13 |
| RE .6:
I _thought_ Buford's folks just had carbines, not repeaters. If
so, they were probably Sharp's. My memory may be faulty, though - I'll
see if I can check.
Bear in mind that Buford had two brigades, or about eight regiments
- and every regiment might have had different weapons (and there could
have been differences within regiments, though that was more common in
the CSA). I don't know that they _did_, but it is possible.
MikeR
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30.8 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Wed Nov 30 1994 14:24 | 32 |
| > I _thought_ Buford's folks just had carbines, not repeaters. If
> so, they were probably Sharp's. My memory may be faulty, though - I'll
> see if I can check.
>
> Bear in mind that Buford had two brigades, or about eight regiments
> - and every regiment might have had different weapons (and there could
> have been differences within regiments, though that was more common in
> the CSA). I don't know that they _did_, but it is possible.
>
> MikeR
Thanks Mike.
I'm not 100% sure where I read it, but I'm thinking _The_Killer_Angels_.
If the late Michael Shaara did his research, here's basically what was
said:
Buford's troops had about 2500 new repeating
carbines, that allowed them to fire at a rate of
about 20 shots per minute, as opposed to the rate of
about 4 shots per minute with a muzzle loading musket.
Part of that could be from Foote's Civil War narrative too....
I'm kind of a gun buff myself, but don't know a lot about those early
firearms......
frank
|
30.9 | Spencer Likely | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Wed Nov 30 1994 15:05 | 8 |
| RE .8:
If the statement is accurate, then the weapons were most likely
Spencer carbines. I should have a couple of sources at home that will
give some clue.
MikeR
|
30.10 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Wed Nov 30 1994 15:23 | 11 |
| >
> If the statement is accurate, then the weapons were most likely
> Spencer carbines. I should have a couple of sources at home that will
> give some clue.
I will look at my books tonight, and try to bring in exact quotes. That
might help a bit....
frank
|
30.11 | Spencers..... | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Thu Dec 01 1994 09:44 | 27 |
| Mike,
I didn't bring in exact quotes, but I realized that I hadn't checked all
my sources.
In _The_Killer_Angels_, Michael Shaara writes something like
He had thrown away the sabres and the silly dragoon
pistols, and equiped them all with the new repeating
carbines. Dug in behind a fence, they could hold anyone
for a while.
I hadn't checked ahead in Foote's work, but in there it clearly states
that Buford's men were equiped with
the new, seven shot, Spencer carbines....
So I guess they were Spencers after all.
thanks for the help,
frank
|
30.12 | Probably NOT Spencers... | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Thu Dec 01 1994 14:26 | 56 |
| RE .11:
Does Foote give a source for his information? I ask because the
sources I checked would seem to indicate they were _not_ Spencers.
There are two threads here. I have two different sources on the
history of the Spencer which agree that the Navy bought some (about
700) in 1862, but that the Army did not officially buy any until after
August, 1863, when Spencer got an interview with Lincoln, who was
impressed with the weapon and quickly "retired" the officer in charge
of procuring small arms, an ardent champion of the muzzle-loader. In
early 1863, General Wilder had equipped a brigade of mounted infantry
in the West with Spencers (without Federal money), with devastating
results to the Confederates. By 1864, the Spencer carbine was the
standard arm of Federal cavalry; however, this used up so much
productive capacity that few Spencer rifles (longer barrel, same
mechanism) were procured for the infantry.
So, it would seem unlikely that two brigades of cavalry in the AoP
were equipped with Spencers in the face of bureaucratic opposition. A
second thread comes from my Gettysburg simulation game, Terrible Swift
Sword, which distinguishes the type of weapon used (mainly) by each
regiment/battery. While not definitive, these games are carefully
researched, and the game shows all eight of Buford's regiments at
Gettysburg armed with carbines, not Spencers. (Gamble's brigade: 8th
Illinois, 12th Illinois, 3rd Indiana, 8th New York; Devin's brigade:
6th New York, 9th New York, 17th Pennsylvania, 3rd West Virginia) The
game _does_ have two cavalry regiments in Custer's brigade armed with
Spencers - 5th and 6th Michigan. I seem to recall reading years ago
that the Governor had gotten the state to pay for equipping these units
with Spencers, but I don't recall where.
Neither Catton's history of the AoP or "Battles and Leaders" makes
any mention of special weapons in Buford's units. Again, that's not
conclusive, but is suggestive when combined with other evidence.
As an aside, the likely weapon for Buford's men was the model 1859
Sharp's carbine, a breach-loader with either a paper or linen
cartridge. The Sharp's would have given Buford's men a rate-of-fire
edge over infantry muskets, with the added advantage that it could be
reloaded while lying down (next to impossible with a muzzle-loader).
About 80,000 Sharps were bought during the war, and it is an early
enough design to be around in mid-'63. The Sharp's seems to be the
only carbine other than Burnside's or Spencer's which was bought in
quantity; Buford might have had Burnside's carbine, but it was similar
to the Sharp (i.e. single-shot, not magazine-fed like the Spencer).
I have seen a few things that make me suspicious of Shaara's
accuracy on detail, in spots, so I would not regard him as
authoritative, and I know Foote claimed to be writing a "narrative
history", so unless he gives a source I would not assume he was
reporting a checked fact. If somebody has access to a regimental
history of one of Buford's units, that might help settle the issue.
MikeR
|
30.13 | | CAMONE::WAY | The Devil's to pay! | Thu Dec 01 1994 16:24 | 32 |
| >
> I have seen a few things that make me suspicious of Shaara's
> accuracy on detail, in spots, so I would not regard him as
> authoritative, and I know Foote claimed to be writing a "narrative
> history", so unless he gives a source I would not assume he was
> reporting a checked fact. If somebody has access to a regimental
> history of one of Buford's units, that might help settle the issue.
>
Well, Shaara mentioned "repeating carbine", which would seem to fit in
with your reference to carbine.
Foote does provide a bibliographical section, where he mentions most,
probably not all, of his sources, but he did eschew individual footnotes
in favor of readability. At least that's what he says in his afterword.
I'd probably be inclined to go with your educated guess of the Sharps.
On the other hand, playing devil's advocate here, and being involved in
a State militia myself, I could envision Buford, a bit of a maverick,
pushing, pulling, cajoling, and in general going outside of regs to get
"repeaters" for his men -- however 2500 is a lot of cajoling and going
outside of regs....8^)
I'll keep poking around!
thanks again,
frank
|
30.14 | Confirm 5th & 6th MI Cav. | NEMAIL::RASKOB | Mike Raskob at OFO | Fri Dec 02 1994 13:26 | 17 |
| RE .12, .13:
A further bit on info - I happened to have a book written by the
fellow who became colonel of the 6th Michigan Cavalry. He confirms
that both the 5th and 6th MI were initially issued Spencer _rifles_
when they got to Washington in very early 1863. He hints that "wire-
pulling" may have been involved, and says that his unit was "one of the
first" Union cavalry outfits to get Spencers. He also says that after
a year they exchanged the rifle model for the Spencer carbine.
So, it would seem best to find a regimental history of some part of
Buford's division, since the _number_ of weapons mentioned (2500) is
about the total strength of Gamble's and Devin's brigades combined -
which means all regiments were supposedly armed with repeaters.
MikeR
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