This story was initially revealed within the June 1948 subject of Outside Life below the title “Fabulous Firearm: The Kentucky Rifle.” The textual content been minimally edited to fulfill up to date requirements.
THE FIRST, and maybe an important, really American firearm was the Kentucky rifle, a weapon which for greater than a century was thought-about the world’s finest and chalked up information that also command respect. It was a picturesque arm-long, swish, and correct in each searching and warfare — and its significance in opening giant areas of the USA to European settlers can’t be overestimated. Some authorities even say {that a} long-range hit by a Kentucky rifle could have gained the American Revolution!
However earlier than we go into that, let’s take a more in-depth have a look at the Kentucky rifle itself. Within the first place, the identify is deceptive. The earliest fashions have been made in Pennsylvania for pioneers, a lot of whom then pushed on into Kentucky — which included all of the territory past the Cumberland Mountains. Subsequently these weapons have been made in small retailers as far west as St. Louis, alongside the Ohio River, and in what are actually Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, the Carolinas — and Kentucky. However many males spoke of their Pennsylvania, not Kentucky, rifles, and sure European firearms authorities nonetheless favor to name them “American rifles.” Then, too, fairly a couple of of those items weren’t rifles however smoothbores, though the bulk had both straight or spiral rifling.
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Why was the Kentucky rifle so successful? In all probability as a result of right here, for the primary time, was a firearm that advanced in direct response to America’s wants. Rifles introduced over from Europe have been of little worth within the American wilderness. Loading was a gradual, tough job. The noise of hammering a tight-fitting ball down the size of the barrel usually scared off sport or attracted consideration on the flawed time. Development was ugly and ungainly; set off guards have been cumbersome but frail; sights have been ineffective in darkish forests or in any spot the place accuracy was important; calibers have been giant; and the rifles as a complete have been heavy and unreliable. Little marvel that for a few years the smoothbores reigned supreme.
That was the state of affairs within the 1720’s when frontiersmen round Lancaster, Pa., started complaining to the newly arrived German and Swiss gunsmiths there. These immigrants have been steeped within the traditions of their homelands, the place they’d heard even the easy flintlock opposed as a result of the smiths needed to retain the costlier wheellock firing mechanism. (The rugged flintlocks despatched sparks flying into the flashpan when the set off was pulled; the wheellock was a fragile spring mechanism which needed to be wound prematurely.)

It was in response to the calls for of obstinate frontiersmen that the well-known Kentucky mannequin advanced. It hit its stride by about 1730 however underwent regular change for a few years. Most rifles have been constructed to the client’s specs or based on the maker’s newest experiments, and the ensuing new concepts have been eagerly seized upon by competing smiths. Because of this, surviving examples present broad variations intimately.
No frontiersman needed to hold a heavy weapon on his lengthy treks within the wilderness. The burden was steadily decreased till the common Kentucky searching rifle weighed between 9 and 10 kilos. (These made for match capturing averaged about 19 kilos.) Equally, utilizing a large-caliber rifle meant that the lone pioneer needed to carry a heavy load of bullets. So the caliber was decreased from the .65 and .70 widespread in Europe to about .45. The pound of lead that after yielded sixteen .70 bullets now gave forty-eight .45 balls — thrice as many photographs.
Concurrently the entrance sight was enlarged and the set off guard strengthened whereas it was stripped of its previous bulk. However most likely essentially the most distinctive change got here within the barrel, which on earlier rifles had been uniformly quick and heavy.
Extra Barrel, Much less Powder
Now it was lengthened, ranging within the early Kentucky fashions from 51 to 77 inches, or as much as greater than triple the size of the common big-game rifle of at this time. This meant that much less powder was wanted than earlier than, as a result of it burned cleaner. Within the opinion of a number of authorities, this lengthy barrel which gave nice accuracy on the identical time that it deadened the noise of the firing was the principle issue within the success of the Kentucky rifle.
Coupled with this was the novel “patch” technique of loading invented by some unsung genius. Thanks largely to this discovery, rifles might be reloaded in a single fourth the time it took earlier than, and ultimately backwoodsmen have been getting off their second shot in lower than half a minute after the primary.
To patch-load a rifle, you forged the lead-ball bullet in a mould 3/100 of an inch smaller than the precise caliber demanded. In loading, you slipped a bit of dressed buckskin or a little bit of previous felt hat, concerning the measurement of a 50-cent piece and effectively greased with tallow, below the ball as you held it over the muzzle. Then, if you rammed the ball down the barrel, the greased patch helped it slide alongside simply, putting off virtually all of the previous noisy hammering.

A “Typical” Kentucky Rifle
All these developments didn’t come directly. They have been unfold over years, but when it have been potential to explain a “typical” or composite Kentucky rifle it could be roughly like this:
Its 42-inch barrel, most likely full octagon, gave the .45 caliber rifle an general size of about 55 inches. The inventory, which prolonged to the muzzle, was of curly maple or sometimes cherry — and, within the south, apple wooden; the buttplate crescent-shaped, as an alternative of the previous straight design. An eight-pointed brass star was sunk within the cheekpiece on the left aspect of the inventory, whereas within the reverse aspect was minimize a field, trimmed in brass, through which the greased patches have been carried. The rifle’s forty-four to fifty elements have been handmade and never interchangeable. Many searching fashions lacked decorations as a result of these would possibly mirror the solar and frighten sport, however different Kentuckys made liberal use of brass on the aspect plates, buttplate, entrance sight, rod pipes or thimbles, and set off guard, in addition to on the patch field. The place brass was missing, German silver or iron was substituted.
Though the early locks (firing mechanisms) have been do-it-yourself, a lot of the later fashions have been imported from Germany or England. The British often provided the flints, which offered for two cents every and have been good for 50 photographs.
To provide a inventory a man-made grain, the maker wound tarred string round and across the wooden and burned it off. Soot and oil have been rubbed in to stain the wooden, and a few shares have been handled with a particular oil varnish. All in all, the Kentucky rifle — some fashions of which reportedly offered for $12 to $14 in opposition to $125 for a elaborate European sporting smoothbore — was made to present lasting satisfaction.
Nevertheless, publicity, rust, and the fixed put on and tear of the split-hickory ramrod compelled many homeowners to return their rifles to the smith for “freshing” or enlarging the caliber. This meant the hunter had to make use of bigger patches or ream out his mould to forged greater bullets. Nonetheless different worn rifles have been refinished with clean bores.

Though legend would have us consider that each frontiersman was a crack shot, and plenty of of them probably have been top-notchers, some customers of the Kentucky rifle have been away under par. That helps account for the recognition of Kentuckys with straight-cut rifling. These made good mixture arms. They’d fireplace two lead balls directly, a lot because the smoothbore may, and even deal with a great deal of BB to No. 4 shot. But they’d fireplace a single patch and ball precisely sufficient to bag large sport. Some hunters even used blended hundreds — a scattering of shot on prime of a lead ball — when out for fox or turkey.
The Kentucky’s flintlock firing mechanism and the bullet mould additionally had incidental makes use of. You would begin a fireplace by putting a tiny wad of unspun flax within the flashpan and sprinkling it with powder. If you pulled the set off, sparks fell on the wad and began it burning. Simply drop this into a little bit pile of dry tinder, and presto — a fireplace!
Sinkers From Bullet Molds
Bullet molds have been made from brass, stone, and even from previous curling irons. They resembled pliers, with a hole in a single jaw to form the bullet. Anglers of the day used them to forged weights for fish nets and seines.
Powderhorns have been carved with scenes, household histories, and maps. They have been usually scraped so skinny that the black powder confirmed by means of, giving the hunter a relentless verify on his provide. The common Kentucky rifleman’s horn was some 11 inches in size and held as much as 4 pound of powder. A lot smaller was the priming-powder horn, which was carried within the pocket or within the searching bag slung by a strap across the neck. This bag additionally contained a wire for cleansing the touchhole (by means of which the priming powder ignited the coarse powder and fired the rifle), flints, a couple of gentle instruments, a bone needle for repairing ripped clothes, and further bullets.
Many Sorts of Sights
Plain open sights have been most well-liked by the early hunters — some kind of notch, say, for the rear with a submit or a fin in entrance. Rear sights have been positioned on grooved slides, and horizontal changes have been potential. Most frontiersmen sighted of their rifles to shoot a bit excessive at 50 yards. The ball reached its peak top between 50 and 100 yards; at 100 yards it registered a 3-inch drop.
Pinhead entrance sights — very similar to the trendy bead sights — have been normal for match capturing, however all types of rear sights, together with peep sights, have been used. Many marksmen swore by an extended brass or iron tube, as much as 5/8 inch in diameter and lengthening the total size of the barrel. It was potential to make horizontal changes on this as a result of it was clamped at every finish to a sliding base. A peephole within the eyecup and a pinhead entrance sight, fastened barely under point-blank vary, accomplished the setup. Customers claimed clearer definition of their targets and a few consultants say that these have been the sights Congress had in thoughts when it ordered the acquisition of telescopes to be used on rifles throughout the Revolution.
American pioneers who grew up with the Kentucky rifle of their palms have been actual riflemen. As hunters, they have been silent, swift, and lethal; as goal shooters they have been cool, self-confident, and correct. And don’t neglect their womenfolk, a few of whom may match their husbands shot for shot. The spouse of 1 gunsmith was acknowledged to be higher than any rifleman within the space. It was her job to check every rifle made by her husband. And lots of a self-reliant frontiersman, who balked at resting a rifle barrel on a helpful prop for an unusual shot, was glad to assist it on his spouse’s shoulder for a tough long-range goal.

To guage wind velocity, these males watched the fluttering of the leaves. They knew many little methods, together with a couple of that had been handed down for a number of generations. Certainly one of these, the observe of stalking large sport whereas hidden beside a horse, had been utilized by archers in Europe tons of of years earlier than. One other was coaxing a bear from his hiding place in an enormous log by sneaking up silently and tapping at intervals on the wooden. Fairly quickly the nosy bruin would clamber out to research — simply in time to be shot.
If his canine treed smaller sport at evening, the backwoodsman had no hesitation in climbing the tree and shaking the animal to the bottom. If he needed a change of food regimen, he may use his Kentucky rifle to shoot giant fish! And to lure gobblers, he made a name from a turkey-wing bone.
Turkey Shoots Have been Enjoyable
A hunter wanted all of the observe he may get if he deliberate to enter a daily turkey shoot. Ranges relied on how a lot of the turkey was seen. If solely the neck and head might be seen when the chook peered over a bulletproof plank, the vary was shorter than if your complete chook was tied out in plain sight.
Many capturing matches have been held within the woods, with squirrels because the targets; a pure type of competitors, since almost all these males shot bushy-tails yr in and yr out. (Utilizing a Kentucky rifle, a contemporary Tennessee gunsmith, William Walker, is alleged to have shot forty squirrels with out a miss in a capturing match with a rival marksman.)
From Kentucky-rifle days come the picturesque tales about “barking” squirrels, a stunt which Daniel Boone is alleged to have been one of many first to carry out. The trick was to hit the bark of the tree immediately below the squirrel. When this was carried out correctly, the bark was splintered and the squirrel, killed or surprised by the concussion, was despatched flying head over heels by means of the air. Attempt it together with your .22!

Washington Requested for Riflemen
George Washington had discovered the worth of Kentucky riflemen within the French and Indian Battle. When the Revolution started, he urged the Continental Congress to place in a name for them. So it occurs that the primary troops raised by a central authorities on this continent have been corporations of straight-shooting backwoodsmen — and this could be referred to as the start of the U. S. Military!
From the far fringes of the frontier the colourful, impartial hunters flocked to their assembly locations. One group of ninety-six males, recruited in Virginia by Daniel Morgan, marched 600 miles in 21 days to affix the military going through the British at Cambridge, Mass. And a few of these powerful clients had walked 200 miles by means of the wilderness to be able to enlist!
The majority of the preventing within the Revolution was carried out with smoothbore muskets, so inaccurate that nineteen photographs out of twenty would miss an 18-foot-square goal at 350 yards. This efficiency was so poor that Benjamin Franklin urged the authorities to equip the Continental Military with bows and arrows.
Like each different enchancment in arms, from the longbow to the atom bomb, the rifle was denounced as barbarous and uncivilized — by the aspect that didn’t have it. After Bunker Hill, the British tried to alibi their heavy losses by charging that the Individuals used rifles with slit bullets that broke in 4 elements when fired. As a matter of truth, the frontier riflemen hadn’t arrived on the time of Bunker Hill; based on a author of the time, the New England farmers who fought there have been armed with muskets, principally with out bayonets. However he provides: “They’re nearly all marksmen, being accustomed to sporting of 1 form or one other from their youth.”
Quickly, nonetheless, the lads with the Kentuckys have been pouring northward, superb townspeople with their marksmanship in addition to with their outlandish garb and swaggering manners. Newspapers have been full of tales of their feats — a lot of which clearly gained within the telling. From Lancaster, Pa., a townsman wrote of seeing a person take a 5 x 7-inch piece of board and maintain it between his knees whereas his brother put eight bullets by means of it in succession from a distance of 60 yards. One other chap provided to shoot an apple off a person’s head on the identical vary, however the timid spectators declined to observe any such idiot stunt.
After they joined the military at Cambridge, the backwoodsmen made life depressing for the British. Their specialty was choosing off officers and sentries. Quickly a Philadelphia printer was writing to a good friend in London: “This province has raised 1,000 riflemen, the worst of whom will put a ball into a person’s head on the distance of 150 or 200 yards. Subsequently advise your officers who shall hereafter come out to America to settle their affairs in England earlier than their departure.”
Like each different enchancment in arms, from the longbow to the atom bomb, the rifle was denounced as barbarous and uncivilized — by the aspect that didn’t have it.
British Common Howe is alleged to have provided a big reward for the seize of a Kentucky rifleman. When one lastly was taken, Howe despatched him to London to point out what the redcoats have been up in opposition to. Just a few demonstrations of his ability introduced British enlistments virtually to zero!
The riflemen could have overdone their long-range capturing, nonetheless. Some American officers appeared to really feel that by making an attempt too many “preposterous” photographs the backwoodsmen have been losing ammunition and getting so many misses that it’d reduce the healthful respect the British had for them. So one outfit was given strict orders to not fireplace at any goal greater than 150 yards away.
The shot which will have gained independence was fired by Daniel Murphy, a frontiersman with Morgan’s outfit. At a crucial second within the Battle of Saratoga, based on the story, Murphy was ordered to choose off the British Common Fraser, who was rallying the redcoats.
Fraser was standing with two aides on a hill 300 yards from Murphy’s place. The backwoodsman calmly loaded, sighted his long-barreled Kentucky rifle, and fired. One of many aides fell. Murphy loaded and fired once more — and missed. By this time Fraser knew he was being shot at, however his code of honor compelled him to remain the place he was. On the third shot he fell, useless. Some historians say that his loss of life determined the battle, which in flip influenced the French to intervene and so made independence positive.
Simply how good was the Kentucky rifle? Happily, we don’t need to attempt to sift truth from fancy within the legends of frontier marksmanship. Fashionable firearms collectors have truly tried out the previous flintlocks in searching and goal work, and have examined their ballistics by scientific strategies.
The outcomes of considered one of these assessments are reported by Townsend Whelen in his book, The American Rifle. The arm was a Rosser flintlock made in Lancaster, Pa., in 1739. It fired a spherical ball of .32-inch diameter weighing 49 grains, with a cost of twenty-two grains of black powder. The check was made on the Remington-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. manufacturing facility, and right here’s how the previous gun confirmed up:
- Muzzle velocity: 1,483 foot seconds
- Muzzle vitality: 239 foot kilos
- Velocity at 100 yards: 850 foot seconds
- Power at 100 yards: 79 foot kilos
- Velocity at 200 yards: 617 foot seconds
- Power at 200 yards: 41 foot kilos
In accordance with Whelen, the perfect vary for rifles of this kind was about 60 yards. They have been seldom used, he says, at greater than 100 yards, and past 150 yards weren’t dependable. In energy he lessons them with the present-day .25 Stevens rimfire cartridge at quick ranges.
A barely extra flattering image was given in searching and goal assessments made by Capt. John G. W. Dillin, collector and authority on Kentucky rifles. In 1921 Dillin took a well-known flintlock referred to as “Outdated Killdeer” to a farm and had “a widely known offhand rifleman” strive it out.
The primary targets have been pigeons sitting on a excessive barn, 30 to 35 yards away. Two birds have been killed in three photographs. What’s extra, the rifleman referred to as his photographs: “Excessive up, as I aimed above the middle of the physique.” On the identical journey, three starlings and a sparrow have been hit at 15 to 40 yards — a complete of six useless birds for eight photographs, strictly offhand.
One other time, Dillin took “ flintlock” to Ontario and tried it on wild geese. Out of three photographs at geese swimming 150 yards away, he hit one chook squarely by means of the physique, one other within the wing. The miss was the primary shot and was on account of overestimating the drop of the bullet.
With Walter M. Cline, of Tennessee, Dillin examined three Kentucky rifles (a spiral-groove, a straight-cut, and a smoothbore) on normal silhouette targets the scale of a median man. Out of ten photographs at 300 yards, the spiral scored 5 hits, the straight-cut two, and the smoothbore one hit. Past 300 yards, Dillin reported, the proportion of hits was small.
Kentuckys Nonetheless in Use
Whereas these chilly figures demolish among the tall tales of frontier legend, the actual fact stays that the Kentucky rifle was a fantastic firearm for its day. In contrast with the perfect sporting and navy arms of the time, it represented nothing lower than a revolution in its discipline.
Some flintlock Kentucky rifles are nonetheless in use at this time, principally for goal capturing by muzzle-loader lovers, however for all sensible functions this well-known arm pale from the image concerning the yr 1830.
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Many specimens have been refitted to deal with percussion caps when these appeared. Calibers have been decreased and barrels have been shortened. Nevertheless, males transferring west discovered this rifle unsuited to be used on horseback, and new weapons started to appear.
However nonetheless the Kentucky rifle lives in reminiscence and custom — a very American, a very nice weapon, worthy of the lads who used it.
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