By , Christopher Spencer’s company folded, and the manufacture of the lever-action repeating rifles ceased. Commercially, it was too bad, for the company assets were taken over by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company of New Haven, while the remaining stock of arms was merchandised through Hartley, Schuyler & Graham. If Spencer had survived for one more year (he did go back into business making shotguns in Brooklyn), it might have been his firm that took over Winchester, instead of vice versa. For with the start of the Franco-Prussian War, Spencer guns received as much use as ever they saw in the Cumberland Valley or the farmlands of eastern Pennsylvania.
Ager, Williams, Vandenberg, these have faded into history. The repeating gun most remembered from the war, and yet one which had a very confusing record of use therein, is that of Dr. Richard Jordan Gatling. I had the pleasure of witnessing how effectively Dr. Gatling had builded when I attended a meeting of the American Ordnance Association at Aberdeen the fall of 1957 . Mounted on a testing stand was a small bundle of barrels, dwarfed in seeming firepower by the huge cannon flanking it. But when the gunner pushed the button and that mighty mite whirred into action with a high-pitched snarling roar so rapidly that no individual explosions could even be sensed, I knew I had witnessed not only the world’s fastest-firing machine gun, and the world’s heaviest gun in weight of metal fired (a ton and a half in one minute), but a gun that was directly inspired by the Civil War special artillery General Butler bought from Dr. Gatling. First of Gatling’s guns was bulky wheeled carriage “c...
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