enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sharps rifle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharps_rifle

    Unlike the Sharps rifle, the carbine was very popular, and almost 90,000 were produced. [13] By 1863, it was the most common weapon carried by Union cavalry regiments, although in 1864 many were replaced by seven-shot Spencer carbines. Some Sharps clones were produced by the Confederates in Richmond. Quality was generally poorer, and they ...

  3. Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharps_Rifle_Manufacturing...

    Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company was the manufacturer of the Sharps Rifle. The company was organized by Samuel Robbins and Richard S. Lawrence as a holding company in Hartford, Connecticut, on October 9, 1851 with $100,000 in capital. Despite Sharps departing from the company bearing his name, Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company produced over ...

  4. Sharps & Hankins model 1862 carbine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharps_&_Hankins_model_1862...

    Action. Breech-loaded. The Sharps & Hankins Model 1862 carbine was a sliding breech action carbine made by Sharps & Hankins Co. in the 1860s and designed by Christian Sharps. The gun is a rimfire .52 caliber and was made in Philadelphia in a quantity of about 8,000. [1] This firearm, patented on July 9, 1861 by Christian Sharps.

  5. Rifles in the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rifles_in_the_American...

    The Union purchased 10,000 Sharps rifles and 80,000 carbines, with many more bought by state governments or soldiers themselves. [28] Spencer rifle: The most widely-used breechloading weapon of the Civil War, the Spencer was a .52 caliber repeating rifle with a spring-fed tubular magazine for seven metallic cartridges in the stock.

  6. Frank Wesson Rifles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Wesson_Rifles

    By 1859, there were a number of single-shot breech-loading rifles available to the American military and public. These included the Sharps rifle (1848), the Smith carbine (1857), and others. Those most suitable for military use were loaded through the breech, but required a separate percussion cap to ignite the cartridge.

  7. Christian Sharps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Sharps

    Sharps & Hankins not only produced four-barrel pistols, but also the single-shot Model 1861 Navy rifles and the Model 1862 carbines, both of which featured forward "sliding breech actions" and fired the .56-52 Spencer rimfire metallic cartridge. The Sharps and Hankins partnership ended in 1867, and Sharps resumed the manufacturing of firearms ...

  8. Burnside carbine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burnside_carbine

    The carbine was designed and patented by Ambrose Burnside, who resigned his commission in the U.S. Army to devote himself full-time to working on the weapon. The carbine used a special brass cartridge which was also invented by Burnside. This cartridge contained a bullet and powder, but no primer; Burnside considered primed cartridges a safety ...

  9. .50-70 Government - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.50-70_Government

    The U.S. Army ordered both rolling-block rifles and carbines in .50-70 and made some rolling blocks at their Springfield Armory facility in this caliber. [5] The U.S. Army also had a large supply of percussion -fired Sharps carbines at the close of the Civil War and had the Sharps Rifle Company convert about 31,000 of the rolling-block rifles ...