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By George C. Neumann
The mixed-pattern muskets used by American
Colonists to win our independence testify eloquently to the “can
do” spirit that made possible our ultimate victory—and
our freedom.
As galloping express
riders and ringing church bells spread across New England during
the early hours of April 19, 1775, thousands of farmers and tradesmen
carrying a variety of firearms poured out of their homes and headed
toward Lexington and Concord to intercept the British Army column
approaching from Boston. America’s War for Independence had
begun. Yet, despite their deeply held convictions, these provincials
had no realistic chance to win.
In opposition against the finest army
and navy in the world, the Colonists possessed no trained armed
forces, no established central government, no financial reserves
and no industry to supply their effort. The Northern American Colonies
had been settled to enrich the mother country by exporting raw materials
to England’s factories and then serve as a market for their
finished goods. Thus, the manufacturing facilities, such as those
needed to produce arms and support a war, did not exist this side
of the Atlantic.
As a young society gripped in a pioneering
spirit, however, the rebels possessed an explosive vitality and
ability to innovate. How they defied the impossible and drew upon
this “new world energy” to successfully equip their
spawning armies is one of the untold stories of our incredible path
to freedom.
Militia Organizations:
In the beginning, the only existing American military groups were
the individual militia systems of each colony. These units were
usually identified by their town or county locations and included
all men from 16 to 60 years of age. Being loosely structured, they
met locally to drill several days each year, but lacked the discipline
to stand against professional troops in open battle.
Each member was equipped with a firearm
plus a bladed back-up arm, such as a short sword, belt axe or bayonet.
Yet, unlike the mother country’s own militia regulations—in
which the authorities controlled the arms and stored them together
in a secured central location between muster days—each American
had to provide his own arms and keep them at home. The gun specifications,
in turn, were vague. Massachusetts, for example, required only “a
good fire arm.” Because Britain had done little in past years
to furnish her Colonists with military arms, the militia employed
a wide assortment of smoothbore muskets, carbines, fusils, trade
guns, light or heavy fowling pieces, and rifles—of varied
lineages and bore sizes.
In addition, as the new United Colonies
hurriedly attempted to create a regular army by enlisting militia
members into Continental Line regiments, many of the recruits left
their personal arms at home for the hunting demands and physical
protection of their families. When Washington arrived at Cambridge
opposite Boston in July 1775, he found an estimated 15 percent of
the troops without firearms and many others with arms not capable
of military field service.
Initial Arms Sources:
The immediate American needs had to be satisfied quickly by obtaining
existing guns. The provincials proceeded to raid local arsenals,
confiscate Loyalist guns, purchase civilian arms, seize British
supplies, acquire cast-off or surplus firearms in Europe through
independent agents and repair or cannibalize damaged pieces.
Efforts were also implemented to make
use of the limited production capabilities within the Colonies.
An estimated 2,500 to 3,000 gunsmiths were available, of which perhaps
two-thirds favored the American cause (Moller I). Early in 1775,
local “committees of safety” were already placing orders
with those makers. (Some modern collectors describe all American
Revolutionary War muskets as “committee of safety” guns.
This term should only refer to those arms produced under a “committee”
contract. Few survived and most were not identified by the makers
who feared retaliation by Royal authorities.)
Within a year, the committees had
largely been superseded by the states, most of which raised and
equipped their own regiments during the war. The Continental Congress
also began issuing multiple contracts through agents of its Board
of War. The rebels’ early specifications followed the British
Land Pattern with its pinned .75-cal. barrel, but the stipulated
barrel lengths varied from 42” to 46” and recommended
bayonet blades ranged from 14” to 18”. Surviving examples
further show that even these official dimensions were routinely
disregarded to expedite production.
Foreign Aid:
Eventually the patriots’ desperate shortage of arms would
be relieved by supplies from abroad. Yet this aid raised even more
complications. Beginning in 1777, shipments began to arrive from
France, as well as the Netherlands, Belgium and Spain. Mixed within
these consignments, however, were firearm patterns of virtually
all Western European nations, as most of the foreign arsenals supplying
American aid had within their inventories captured, abandoned or
damaged arms from multiple enemies of previous wars. American agents,
such as Benjamin Franklin, Silas Deane and Arthur Lee, also arranged
large private deliveries of assorted armaments from Europe’s
professional arms dealers. Such an overwhelming variety of gun patterns
in the American ranks were further aggravated by a substantial number
of odd musket components within the cargos.
American Production:
The existing provincial gunsmiths included a number of master craftsmen,
but the need for volume soon overrode artistry as their primary
objective. The most time-consuming work was making locks and barrels.
Even before hostilities began, it was usually more cost effective
for the makers to import those two components in bulk and make the
remaining parts locally. This new flood of used parts changed most
gun production to mixed assembly and repair. The author has found
as many as five countries represented on a single American musket.
Some of these reused parts even had portions cut off to reduce inletting
work.
Although the typical American-made
long arms favored the familiar British Brown Bess Land Pattern during
the early war years, they shifted toward French designs and components
as foreign aid expanded and France’s serviceable muskets re-equipped
most of the Continental Line. The transition came slowly, however,
for the maintenance and repair of arms returned from active field
use added to the gunsmiths’ burdens.
As late as 1778, General von Steuben
wrote of Washington’s line regiments following his arrival
at Valley Forge in February, “The arms were in horrible condition,
covered with rust, half of them without bayonets, many from which
a single shot could not be fired … muskets, carbines, fowling
pieces and rifles were seen in the same company.”
Centralized Locations:
To cope with these continuing demands, the individual states and
the Congress began to establish larger and more centralized storage/repair
facilities. By 1778, there were six Continental arsenals located
in Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, Carlisle, Lancaster), Maryland (Head
of Elk), New York (Albany), and Virginia (Manchester). (Moller I).
In 1780 Congress created the Philadelphia Supply Agencies, which
included The French Factory, The Continental Armory, and related
parts suppliers as major repair and production sources centered
in that city. Also by this late date, Congress had enough inventory
to sell surplus arms to the states which, in turn, had expanded
their own capacities. Virginia founded a State Gun Factory in Fredericksburg
(1775), but most of the states resorted to encouraging private gunmakers
in favorable locations, such as Pennsylvania’s Lancaster County,
Connecticut’s Goshen and Virginia’s Rappahannock Forge.
The rebels’ most complete manufacturing resources were in
Pennsylvania, which had important iron furnaces; but much of this
capacity was focused on civilian long rifles, which are not covered
in this article.
Identification:
Because the great proportion of muskets made here during the Revolution
mounted a mixture of reused or locally made parts, no standard American
pattern emerged from the war. This is why a modern collector is
faced with the challenge to identify and date each component in
order to determine the probable age of a gun. There are, however,
certain indicators for associating smoothbore long arms with our
relevant 1715 to 1783 period:
• Most period stocks had a round wrist; it became oval beginning
about 1790.
• The musket stock usually included a chair rail crease or
pinched channel along the lower edge of a raised comb.
• Locks prior to the 1790s were made with a rounded cock on
a rounded lockplate, or a “flat on flat.”
• The lockplate ended with a tapered point for its tail versus
the 19th century rounded form.
• The tip of a cock’s post was either stubby, notched
or had a forward curl; after 1795, it often curled toward the rear.
• When present, sideplates were a single, complete piece;
two separate components appeared after 1800.
• Many Colonists had an aversion to sling swivels; some cannibalized
European trigger guards retained an earlier hole drilled for the
lower swivel, but the American stocks frequently omitted a hole
for the second swivel in its fore-end.
• Components fabricated by the provincials were usually cruder
and cheaper than European made elements, such as rolled sheet brass
ramrod thimbles versus the British use of castings.
• Hunting fowlers, which normally extended their stock fore-ends
to the muzzle often had them cut back and added a barrel stud to
mount a bayonet for military service.
• Roller frizzens are found on some private European guns
from our period, but they did not appear on issued long arms until
about 1800.
• Most European military stocks were of black walnut or, occasionally,
beech. The Americans also employed walnut, but, in addition, showed
a preference for cherry and either plain or striped maple. On a
limited basis, the U.S. Department of Agriculture will generously
test pieces of wood (from inside your stock) to identify North American
vs. European species. (For information, write: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, One Gifford
Pinchot Drive, Madison, WI 53705-2398).
The great majority of surviving muskets
manufactured by the Colonists are not identified by their maker
or source. Yet a number of the states did, at times, stamp their
issued arms to indicate ownership especially early in the war. These
included, “MB” or “CMB”, Massachusetts;
“SC”, Connecticut; “CR”, Rhode Island; “PP”
or “P”, Pennsylvania; “JS” or “PS”,
Maryland; “SP”, New Jersey; “NH” New Hampshire;
“CN”, New York; and “SGF” (State Gun Factory),
Virginia. In addition, by 1777 European arms were arriving in bulk
without government ownership identification and the Congress instructed
each Continental regiment in the field to stamp or brand its muskets
“US”, “U:STATES”, or “UNITED STATES”.
Their compliance was spotty, but the practice continued in postwar
arsenals (Guthman).
Out of the more than 300,000 long
arms used by the American line troops during the War for Independence,
probably in excess of 80,000 were the products of America’s
scattered gunsmiths using mixed components. Yet, because the soldier’s
round lead bullets were undersized to allow for powder fouling in
the bore and the issued socket bayonets had to be individually fitted
to each barrel, their odd pedigrees did not create the extreme hardships
one might have expected. As such, they filled a vital gap in arming
the early regiments and continued as the major repair and maintenance
sources for Washington’s troops until the war was won. The
individual muskets illustrated in this article are considered typical
of the variety of long arms produced by this homegrown cottage industry.
After facing an almost impossible supply
problem following Lexington/Concord, the committed Colonists vigorously
pursued all available sources to create the -desperately needed
supply of arms. Today their mixed-pattern muskets comprise a special
category for -collectors and historians that -testifies so eloquently
to the “can do” spirit which made possible our ultimate
victory.
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