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The Long Rifle was Most Important

The short rifle is the most colorful of the Enfield arms, and also the rarest, as used in the United States service.
Only "8,034 Enfield rifles, short, calibre .577, sword bayonet," are listed as having been procured at a cost of $187,915.09. But the long Enfield, three iron bands and a 39-inch barrel of .577 or .58 caliber, was unquestionably the most important. Not only were 428,-292 of them purchased by Schuyler, Hartley, or Naylor and Company, but many of those fine London Armoury guns shipped by Major Huse in blockade runners fell prey to "the anaconda" and were delivered to New York. First shipments were of the Ml853 model, obsolescent because of the spring bands.

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