@ Ax.338
"The Brits had been saying since 1902 when the Ross saga started, there should be a service rifle of universal pattern for use throughout the Empire. They finally got their wish."
Very true. Let us not forget the WHOLE story. Britain was adopting the SMLE but Canada would not be ALLOWED to purchase any. Canada would not be ALLOWED to set up a factory and produce the SMLE here. BSA would not be ALLOWED to set up a plant in Canada to build the SMLE. BSA would not even be ALLOWED to sell SMLEs to Canada.
Those were the options. They were ALL proposed. They were ALL ruled against in turn. Canada had several choices: Canada could buy more Sniders, Canada might buy Martinis, Canada might even be allowed to purchase more Long Lees as they became available as surplus.... but Canada would NOT be allowed to have parity with The Mother Country. The Colonial Office was adamant on this, having forgotten conveniently that Canada was no longer a COLONY but rather a SELF-GOVERNING DOMINION.
Then along comes Sir Charles Ross, saying in effect, "Hey, guys, I have a design for a rifle which is a helluvva lot BETTER than the SMLE. Give me a contract and I'll build and equip a factory out of MY OWN POCKET and build you all the rifles you can use!"
It really wasn't much of a choice, was it?
So the Ross entered production, had a couple of bobbles with the 1903, quickly became the 1905 which went through 82 design variations at the behest of the "experts", proceeding from Mark II to Mark II***** between 1906 and 1910...... and setting new records in every classification in which it was shot. The 1911 record score (74/75 at 100 yards) remained unbeaten for half a century.
The stage thus was set for the 1910, the Mark III, Ross's "perfect" military and sporting rifle.
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A "Smellie" (or possibly simply "smelly") RANT:
As far as "truly authoritative" books are concerned, such shall never exist. EVEN Wikipedia insists on PUBLISHED sources and prohibits "original research" and "anecdotal evidence". Consider this for a moment. I have done my own testing and research concerning the Ross; NONE of it meets "accepted academic standards". I have interviewed men who actually USED the Ross in the single most horrific rifle engagement ever fought. Their defence of the Ross in the most trying conditions EVER..... does not meet academic standards; their opinions are "anecdotal" and thus inadmissable..... and the paid-for PUBLISHED slurs against the rifle are accepted as Gospel.
As far as working to obtain a degree in something as "unorthodox" as small-arms development and its historical influence, forget it. I TRIED. I attended Brandon University and was the only student to receive an "A" grade in an impromptu (streetcorner) examination from Dr. Charles Lightbody. Dr. Lightbody's debilitating penultimate stroke ("cerebral accident" if we must be scientific) prevented my Rhodes which Doc had planned for me. The 1970 Postal Strike (which saw an unofficial 100-odd TONS of First Class mail burned in Manitoba alone) prevented my application from reaching Rice, where Dr. "Red" Roy was awaiting it. My completed thesis, in early form, was sent to Dr. Roy for grading and suggestions; he read it and sent it on to Ed Ezell at the Smithsonian. I am still waiting for the results. The thesis, I am told from another source, was flawed; I did not understand the great importance of fluency in Mediaeval French and a thorough knowledge of Froissart should one attempt to analyse the forces and stresses working in the mechanism of the Maxim Gun in its production form. The academic world exists in its little ivy'd ivory towers and has little interest in The Real World. That leaves ANY and ALL research as "anecdotal" and "not peer-reviewed" and therefore vastly inferior because, not having been PUBLISHED, it does not exist to Academics. Not having been "peer-reviewed" it has no value. I query: in this area, who are my peers? There are a handful of people on HERE who I would regard as qualified to critique my work, but damned few elsewhere. We are in an academic area of nonexistence, period. I am qualified to offer experience and opinions HERE; I am qualified to identify unknown weapons for the Canadian War Museum and for the Imperial War Museum (I have done both) and I have had my greasy little hands inside the VERY first Maxim ever made. But I am NOT an "expert". If you want an "expert" you have to ask the guy in the ivy-covered ivory tower: the guy who "hates guns", votes NDP or farther Left, regards the Army as a regrettable collection of uncouth illiterates and has never been on a rifle-range in his life!
HE'S THE EXPERT!
And I STILL think the Ross had a LOT of good points. So did my Grandfather, a Sniper with 54 Battalion. But neither of US "know anything".
And neither do the rest of us. Let the fun and games proceed!