My objective is to reach the 1,000-post mark this year. I’m at 925 and climbing…
I appreciate the input and comments from CGN friends, and I can’t help but notice it is the same regulars who take a moment to comment, and share their views and experiences, for which I am thankful. I’m assuming others are following along too, from the rising view count (I checked, visiting the thread multiple times from the same account doesn’t add to the number of views). To the many lurkers out there, don’t be afraid to chime in, ask questions, tell me I’m wrong, or just say hi. It’s all good. This is the friendly corner of CGN. Knowing folks are getting something useful out of all this, even if only summer reading, keeps me going.
Back to history and the sporting press. The debate between the merits of the breech-loader versus the muzzle-loader in the pages of
The Field is of great interest to me, and I can only imagine that back then, regular readers of
The Field looked forward to every new issue, with many taking out their steel-nib pens, inkwells and blotters to write queries or elegant responses to the Editor, usually hiding their identities with a snappy handle-- sound familiar? The readership of
The Field not only included the gentlemanly class, but also the principal gunmakers, who used
The Field for their own advertising and to stay up-to-date with the current ideas that influenced the demands of prospective clients. With column space being limited, only select letters would be printed, and it appears the Editor chose those that made the best points, provided valuable information, or gave opinions that might provoke a subsequent response. Letters that might leave a bewhiskered gentleman red-faced, spluttering into his port, and reaching for his writing-box, sold newspapers. Regularly, the Editor would add a comment to a letter, sometimes intended to challenge or provoke. Or the Editor would call for a more temperate tone between warring correspondents when it looked like a call for seconds and pistols at dawn might be an outcome. Occasionally a spat occurred between a gunmaker and the Editor, for which the 20th-century expression
“never argue with someone who buys ink by the barrel” most certainly applied, as the Editor always had the last word, and the sharpest nib.
For a full account, you’ll have to wait for my book. Suffice to say that the Editor, John Henry Walsh, felt he was doing his civic duty by proposing the newspaper host a public trial to test the merits of muzzle-loaders and breech-loaders. Claims had begun to be so far-fetched (think of fanboys arguing, each trying to out-claim the other), that an objective trial had to be conducted to settle what had become a noisy battle-without-end, even if in the meantime it did help sell papers. Here is an example. In the 31 October 1857 issue of
The Field, Major Henry Astbury
“The Old Shekarry” Leveson’s letter was published, titled
“Observations on the Breech-loader.” Leveson, a prolific author and one considered to be amongst the greatest big-game hunters of the Victorian period, championed the cause of the breech-loader. As someone who fought Napoleon in the Peninsular Campaign, favouring a French invention, albeit one ‘improved upon’ by a London gunmaker, is quite notable! Leveson stated,
“being fully convinced in my own mind that, sooner or later, a complete revolution must take place in the manufacture of firearms, and the present gun (notwithstanding the excellence it has attained) will be as completely superseded by the breech-loader (both for sporting purposes as well as in the army), as the old flint Brown Bess is by the Enfield rifle.” In his letter he chose to compare the use of the muzzle-loader with that of the breech-loader, pointing out such matters as the difficulty of reloading a muzzle-loader while on the back of an animal; the noise and bother of using a ramrod, thereby scaring game; soiling one’s clothes from having to place the butt of the muzzle-loading gun on wet or muddy ground for reloading, and having one’s hands blackened from powder stains; the difficulty of loading a muzzle-loader in cold weather; and the ease of changing loads, or shot for ball, with the breech-loader. Leveson also maintained that having a breech-loader obviated the need for a second gun and loader.
Unfortunately, in addition to his accurate observations on quickness, safety, convenience, and ease of use, Leveson also made a number of claims that were almost too good to be true, and in doing so, sparked many subsequent responses, including criticisms from some of the most highly regarded gunmakers at the time. These included the assertions that
“there is much less report from a breech-loader than from an ordinary gun, from the whole discharge taking place internally;” that
“There is very much less recoil than from an ordinary gun, – a great advantage in a long day’s shooting; no blackened shoulders, no stiffness the day after;” and, most controversially,
“The breech-loader hits much harder, and consequently carries further, than the ordinary gun.” The reasons Leveson gives in support of the improved performance are that
“the ignition takes place in the body of the charge itself, and is consequently more instantaneous, the whole of the powder exploding. Now, with an ordinary gun, having a long communication (the nipple) between the point of ignition and the charge, the force of the powder in the nipple and that part of the charge nearest to it drives the powder in the most distant part of the charge unexploded through the barrel – consequently, the explosive force of part of the powder is lost.” Leveson also claimed
“there is no windage – the wads which enter the breech end of the barrel being too large to enter the muzzle,” and
“there being so very little recoil from a breech-loader, a much greater charge of powder can be used, and consequently the shot is driven further and harder.” Leveson concluded:
“Altogether, the breech-loader by Lefaucheux, with the recent improvements made by Mr. Lang of Cockspur-street, is the most perfect arm for the sportsman that has, as yet, been brought out; and I conclude my rather long effusion by advising my friends and brother sportsmen to try the breech-loader themselves.” To which the supporters of the muzzle-loader claimed it was all nonsense, nothing could surpass the ‘common gun.’
Here is one such ‘common gun,’ a good (but not top) quality double-barrelled 13-bore percussion gun marked Robert Adams of London, made 1858-1865. It has no serial number, 30” fine twist barrels, and the top rib is marked “Robert Adams 76 King William Street London EC.” While there are many finer examples around, I grabbed this one to illustrate a decent front-stuffer, because from the address I know it comes from the period when sportsmen were informed by
The Field trial and could choose between the muzzle-loader and the pin-fire. It has seen remarkably little use, the springs are stiff, and the chequering is about as good as one can find in a 165-year-old gun
(thanks, Bryben, for correcting my calculation!).
Adams is, of course, better known for his revolvers and his many patents related to them, but he also made a number of sporting guns. Robert Adams was born in 1811 in Marldon, Devonshire, and he may have been apprenticed to the gunmaker John Clarke in Newton Abbott. Robert moved to London in 1841, to work for George & John Deane, hardware dealers and gunmakers, at 30 King William Street. In 1846, Robert became manager of George and John Deane's gunmaking business. In 1851, he was made a partner in Deane, Adams & Deane, but it appears that by then he was also trading on his own account. In 1856, Robert became a shareholder in the London Armoury Company Ltd who took over the Deanes's factory at 2 New New Weston Street. Robert was appointed manager, while also remaining a partner in John Deane & Sons. In 1858, Robert resigned from the London Armoury Company Ltd, and started his own business as a wholesale and retail gun maker at 76 King William Street. He was also appointed gunmaker to the Prince Consort, Prince Albert. Robert was declared bankrupt in 1865. He began again in 1866, at 40 Pall Mall, but the business closed within the year, and he died in 1870.
Next, the rules of the trial, and the results.