- CHAPTER 1 Old Brown Pulls a Raid
- CHAPTER 2 The Militiamen
- CHAPTER 3 Ordnance-Industry: Mismatched Team
- CHAPTER 4 The Rifle, The Primer, The Ball
- CHAPTER 5 Models Perfected
- CHAPTER 6 Rifle Muskets: Civil War Scandals
- CHAPTER 7 Injustice to Justice
- CHAPTER 8 Millions for Muskets
- CHAPTER 9 Caleb Huse Incurs Some Debts
- CHAPTER 10 Breechloaders of Chicopee
- CHAPTER 11 Federal Carbines
- CHAPTER 12 Fremont Arms the Western Army
- CHAPTER 13 The Dreaded Horizontal Shot-Tower
- CHAPTER 14. That Damn Yankee Rifle
- CHAPTER 15 Remington: Prelude to Conflict
- CHAPTER 16. Vulcan Hammers at Ilion’s Forge
- CHAPTER 17 The Starr Rises
- CHAPTER 18. Manhattan Firearms Goes To War
- CHAPTER 19 Sharpshooters
- CHAPTER 20 Machine Guns—Masterworks or Monstrosities?
- Requa’s and Billinghurst’s Machine Gun
- First Use
- Confederate Machine Cannon
- The Gatling Gun
- Gatling’s Later Career
- CHAPTER 21 Enfield: The North's Second Rifle
- The Birmingham Tower Enfield
- The Potts & Hunt Gun
- The London Armoury Gun
- Deceptive Marking
- Unusual Details
- Slings and Ramrods
- The Long Rifle was Most Important
- Enfields Made in America
- Importance of the Enfield
- The Leetch Gun
- Other Imported Guns
- Arms from the Association
- Records of Other Purchases
- CHAPTER 22 Continental Arms
- The Austrian Lorenz
- The Jaeger
- Dingee’s Austrian Rifles
- Consol Weapons
- French and Belgian Arms
- German and Austrian Arms
- Bavarian Guns
- Weapons Offered by Boke
- Cursory Inspections
- Hagner's Outcry
- Boker Gets Desperate
- Wright Was Given a Superhuman Task
- Wright Accomplished a Miracle
- Hagner's Outcry
- CHAPTER 23 Yankee Revolvers
You place me in a most embarrassing position, Mr. Secretary. How is that, Mr. Wilkeson? the gaunt-faced Penn sylvanian queried, the lines of his expression amplified by the fatigue and, somewhat, disappointment with which he laid down his role as Secretary of War for Mr. Lincoln. Because, Mr. Cameron, the newspaperman re sponded, your contract for rifle muskets with the Eagle Manufacturing Company of Mansfield, Connecticut is for only 25,000 arms, and my friends there, whom I induced to engage in this business in expectation of your issuing a further order, as your assistant Mr. Scott assured me you would, will be sorely embarrassed in their operations on this small amount. Indeed this is bad news to me, Mr. Wilkeson, War Secretary Simon Cameron sympathetically observed, as he stuffed papers from his desk drawer into a large portfolio, scanning them briefly, consigning some to the waste basket. But as you can see, I am leaving office today; I believe Mister Stanton, who repla
Mr. Edwards ~
ReplyDeleteAre you familiar with my work: "Dancing with the Philistines: The Life & Times of Colonel Caleb Huse?" If not, I would like to invite you to take a look at it, if interested, and become one of the required scholars who is qualified to comment on or peer-review my work (for the purposes of having it published by a reputable company).
Your attention to this matter would be honored and most appreciated.
Please contact me at my personal email:
omega_ceo@yahoo.com
V/r,
David R. Stevens.