- 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
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...
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.