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By George C. Neumann
Brown Bess muskets were issued to “Redcoats”
for nearly a century and served on both sides during the American
Revolution.
It began with a contract
by Britain’s Royal Board of Ordnance dated September 15, 1714.
The document’s purpose was not to authorize additional arms,
but to develop a system of manufacture and control. The board would
accumulate components of a new standard longarm pattern and inventory
them at the Tower of London armory for release to private contractors
in time of need. They, in turn, would provide the stocking and finishing
of the final arms in conformity with a prototype musket (usually
bearing an official wax seal). Locks, barrels and other iron components
were to originate largely from Birmingham, while most brass furniture,
stocking and assembly would be centered in London. All of the parts
would then be subjected to close quality and tolerance inspections
by the Board of Ordnance.
The new procedure was a brave attempt
to remedy the chaos of arms diversity that England faced at the
conclusion of the war of the Spanish Succession in 1713. Unfortunately,
it challenged some of the most powerful groups in highly stratified
English society. The majority of army regiments were controlled
by colonels who were important private individuals with established
economic and political power. Each would be given governmental funds
to recruit, equip and maintain a regiment. Any money remaining was
considered his to keep. Prior to this date, the colonel was constrained
only by vague requirements limiting barrel length and bore size
for his regiment’s longarms. As a result, he arbitrarily chose
among a wide range of domestic and foreign patterns of varying quality
and price.
Further opposition came from the entrenched,
private London Gunmakers’ Company that saw this change as
a threat to its traditional control of the design, specification
and production of England’s existing arms industry.
As might be expected, the new system
was strongly opposed and then deliberately ignored. Nevertheless,
the board’s patient yet focused efforts finally resulted in
a new musket design in 1722 called the “King’s Pattern.”
Resistance to the new discipline along with the absence of wartime
pressures delayed its production until 1728. The new standard musket
that ushered in England’s organized ordnance control was first
issued in 1730 as the “Long Land” pattern. It was the
beginning of the famed “Brown Bess” series that would
become a legend through its contribution to the winning of Britain’s
empire and to America’s eventual freedom.
Firearms Capabilities:
The 18th century musket was essentially
a large smoothbore shotgun. After loading from the muzzle with loose
blackpowder and a round lead bullet from a cylindrical, paper-wrapped
cartridge, the musket was fired by the flintlock action above the
trigger. A rotating cock holding a piece of flint snapped forward
to strike a pivoting L-shaped frizzen or “steel.” That
action created sparks that ignited a small portion of priming powder
in a projecting flashpan sending flame through the barrel’s
touch hole to reach the main charge. Obviously, it would not perform
in the rain and depended upon a sharpened flint and properly hardened
steel frizzen for reliability.
The real problem, however, was the
blackpowder quality. Follow-ing each firing, roughly 55 percent
would remain as a black sludge that built up inside the barrel clogging
the touch hole and coating the lock. To cope with this fouling residue,
the average ball was four to six hundreds of an inch smaller than
bore size. Upon ignition, the undersized ball bounced and skidded
up the barrel and proceeded in a direction determined by its last
contact with the bore. Beyond 60 yds., the ball would lose its reliability
to hit a man-size target.
These limitations determined 18th
century battle tactics, which employed long lines of men trained
for speed of loading rather than accuracy. They were expected to
average four rounds per minute. The soldiers typically pointed their
arms and fired in controlled volleys at enemy troops positioned
50 to 60 yds. away. The typical battle was decided by a disciplined
bayonet charge ending in a hand-to-hand melee.
To meet these combat conditions, the
new British Brown Bess standard musket was designed to deliver a
large bullet at low velocity. It employed a sturdy stock for use
as a club in close fighting and had an overall length that combined
with a long, socket bayonet to create a spear or pike for impacting
an enemy’s line. It was also designed to be durable and to
withstand the rigors of years of active campaigning. The Brown Bess
was to successfully fulfill all of these demands.
The Brown Bess Pattern:
Britain’s military long arms
during the 18th century were officially considered in two groups:
Land Service and Sea Service. We are concerned with the former.
The unofficial term, “Brown Bess,” has various claims
for its origin, but a mention in the April 2-9, 1771 issue of the
Connecticut Courant verifies the name’s acceptance in America
preceding our War for Independence.
The basic Brown Bess musket mounted
a round, smoothbore, .75-cal. barrel on a walnut “heart wood”
stock held by a vertical screw through the breech plug tang plus
lateral cross-pins that pierced tenons brazed to its underside.
The upper stock terminated 4" below the muzzle to permit attaching
a bayonet. A rectangular top stud behind the muzzle secured the
bayonet after sliding through slots in the socket and also functioned
as an aiming guide. There was no rear sight.
Its butt included a round wrist extending
back to a handrail form beneath the comb. The ramrod, in turn, slid
into a bottom stock channel and was retained by four pipes. Just
below the bottom pipe was a stock swell intended as a forward “hand
hold.” All of the attached accessories (or “furniture”)
were of cast brass. The two-screw lock had a rounded base plate
that mounted a swansneck cock. Two swivels for a shoulder sling
were also included. Its weight totaled 10 to 11 lbs.
Like the soldiers who fired them,
traditional British arms designs were known for their consistency.
These fundamental features would persist until the late years of
the 18th century despite an interim reduction in length and a gradual
simplification of the lock and furniture. Official control and proofing
sources for the King’s arms were the Board of Ordnance at
the Tower of London and the less disciplined Dublin Castle armory
supplying troops in the “Irish Establishment.” During
war-time, supplementary contracts were often made with continental
European manufacturers. Similar muskets approximating this design
were also ordered directly from private contractors in England by
some British regimental colonels, local militias, private trade
organizations and various American colonies.
The Brown Bess patterns employed in
the Revolu-tionary War are best considered in two categories that
are most easily identified by their barrel lengths: the 46"
“Long Land” and the 42" “Short Land”
muskets. They are also named by some modern collectors as the “First”
and “Second” patterns. (A “Third” pattern
is often included, but refers to a 39"-barreled musket privately
produced in England for the East India Co. Army in India. It did
not officially reach America during the Revolution, but it was finally
adopted by the British government in the 1790s.)
Long Land Brown Bess (“First
Pattern”):
There were three fundamental variations
of this first category: the 1730, 1742 and 1756 patterns.
Long Land Pattern 1730:
Considered the first of the Brown
Bess series, it included a 46" barrel (.75 cal.) with a baluster-shaped
breech pinned to a walnut stock, a curved banana-shaped, rounded
lock bearing a single (internal) bridle, heavy brass furniture,
a wooden ramrod, plus raised stock carving around the lock and sideplate.
The arm was issued without a nosecap, although some regiments added
a brass end band. Its total length was approximately 62". After
the War of Jenkins Ear commenced in 1739, a special effort was made
to replace most of the remaining non-conforming “colonel’s”
muskets with this 1730 design.
Long Land Pattern 1742:
As the fighting expanded into the
War of the Austrian Succession (ending in 1748), this updated version
added an exterior bridle joining the lock’s flashpan and frizzen
screw, introduced a new trigger guard, reduced the raised stock
carving, and defined the final beavertail shape carved around the
barrel tang. Its basic form remained unchanged. These 1730 and 1742
Patterns were the primary British infantry firearms used in America
during the French and Indian War (1754-1763).
Long Land Pattern 1756:
In the late 1740s, further im-provements
were initiated based upon wartime experience. They were incorporated
into this last of the three Long Land Brown Besses and included:
a steel button-head ramrod now accompanied by a lengthened 4"
upper rammer pipe having a flared front opening; the former banana-shaped
lock was straightened along its bottom edge; and the raised stock
carvings (including the forward hand hold) were further reduced.
A cast brass nose cap at the end of the fore-end was also adopted.
The 1756 Long Land musket experienced most of its North American
usage in the Revolutionary War.
Short Land Brown Bess (“Second
Pattern”):
This second and shorter of the two
Land Pattern categories is best defined in three stages: The Marine
or Militia, 1768 and 1777 patterns.
Marine or Militia Pat-tern 1756 and 1759:
The need for a lower cost musket
to arm the Marines and English militia led to the adoption of this
arm in 1756. It retained the Brown Bess form, but reduced the barrel
to 42" (still in .75 cal.), used a wooden ramrod and economized
further by omitting the nose cap, tail pipe and escutcheon. Moreover,
the rounded sideplate shape of the Long Land design was now flattened
while the prior 6" long brass butt tang was shortened to 3
3/4" and included a distinctive upper screw head.
In 1759, it was upgraded by replacing
the earlier version’s wooden ramrod with a steel button-head
form and adding a tailpipe, nose cap and lengthened upper pipe.
Short Land Pattern 1768:
The British infantry was already
leaning toward a shorter arm. (Many 4" sections of sawed-off
Long Land barrels have been excavated from French and Indian War
sites.) Impressed with the success of the Marine or Militia musket,
they adopted the 42" barrel to create a new Short Land standard
infantry Brown Bess in 1768. This configuration retained many features
of the previous Long Land Pattern 1756 design, but with the reduced
42" barrel length, flattened side plate, shortened butt tang
(no top screw) and reduced stock carving.
Short Land Pattern 1777:
As an adjustment to wartime demands,
two changes were authorized for the Short Land Brown Bess in 1777.
A less expensive lock then specified for the private East India
Co. was adopted and the second ramrod pipe was changed from the
previous barrel shape to a straight sloping profile with an expanded
front opening (“Pratt’s Improvement”) already
in use.
The Brown Bess’s Role in the
American Revolution:
As with any country suddenly involved
in a war, the American Colonies in 1775 had to acquire a great number
of arms quickly. Their immediate supply was already in the militia
system of each state that required men from 16 to 60 years of age
to own a longarm plus a bladed secondary arm such as a sword, bayonet
or belt axe. Those and other flintlocks they pressed into service
included a broad mixture of various locally made hunting and military
designs using assorted old and new parts, commercial arms contracted
from private makers, inventories of provincial arsenals, confiscated
Loyalist arms, state purchases of spare guns from civilians, surplus
supplies from European dealers and muskets issued here by the British
during prior wars. These latter arms were largely obsolete and repaired
arms, and in many cases were vintage Dutch, Liege and other European
cast-offs. Thus, the few Brown Besses initially in American hands
were usually worn versions of the early Long Land 1730 and 1742
designs, which were later supplemented by at least 17,000 more recent
patterns captured during the conflict (Moller, Ref. 5).

The convex brass side plate shape (top) with its distinctive
tail appeared on all three Long Land patterns (1730 example
shown). Beginning with the Marine or Militia musket in 1756
and through the subsequent Short Land configurations, the original
design (bottom) continued but with a flat surface. |
The majority of locally
manufactured rebel arms followed the English pinned barrel format
prior to the heavy import of French and other European military
aid beginning in 1777, which supplied most of the Continental Line
for the remainder of the war. Yet the Brown Bess remained a major
share of the arms carried by provincial forces through 1783—both
as complete muskets and as surviving components remounted on the
large number of locally assembled American arms.
At the beginning of hostilities, the
Royal forces had at least 5,200 muskets in storage mostly in New
York and Quebec (Bailey, Ref. 1,2). They were primarily wooden ramrod
Long Land 1730s and 1742s. Most active British regiments here were
equipped with the later 1756 version having the steel ramrod. Through
the war’s first two years, the Long Land remained the primary
British arm in America, and earlier wooden ramrod patterns were
normally given to Loyalist units or as replacements to Hessian troops.
Some Short Land muskets arrived early with a few of the new regiments
from Britain, and they became the British army’s principal
arm after 1777. The English carbines and fusils, although not covered
in this article, usually adopted the Brown Bess configuration in
reduced dimensions.
During the Amer-ican Revolution’s
eight years, England produced more than 218,000 Land Service longarms
and contracted for another 100,000 of the Short Land Pattern 1777
from Liege and German sources after France entered the hostilities
in 1778 (Bailey, Ref, 1,2). Created as the beginning of a new system
for standardization and quality control, these venerable Brown Bess
muskets became the workhorse that was instrumental in determining
the future of North America and much of the world. Today, they remain
as icons reminding us as collectors and historians of the courage
and sacrifices during those formative years of our heritage.
Special appreciation is extended to
Joseph C. Devine for his generosity in photographing the arms for
this article at his J.C. Devine, Inc., facilities. |