
British
Military Flintlock Rifles 1740–1840
By
DeWitt Bailey
264
pages, 8.5” X 11” hardcover: $47.95 plus s/h
Reviewed
by Terry S. Todish for MUZZLELOADER. Published in July/August 2004 issue.
For many years the popular image of the early American era portrayed hawk-eyed
frontiersmen armed with longrifles either fighting alongside or against
red-coated drones armed with Brown Bess muskets. Americans didn’t use
smoothbores, and redcoats didn’t use rifles. Either that or every soldier was
armed with a rifle. This misconception hasn’t only appeared in popular media, as DeWitt Bailey points out in his introduction:
The
role of the rifle in combat prior to its general adoption by all of the line
infantry regiments in the mid-19th century is perhaps one of the most
under-researched, misunderstood, and misrepresented developments in the field of
military history . . . There appear to be military historians still producing
works who are unaware that the rifle was not generally adopted for infantry
until the third quarter of the 19th century, who refer to any small arm in the
hands of infantry as a “rifle” regardless of date.
In
recent years, however, this image has begun to change. Bailey’s remarkable
book may help this process along.
Bailey
is uniquely qualified for the task. Long regarded as an authority on British
military small arms, he has been associated with the Imperial War Museum in
London, the Tower of London Museum and other museums in England and Europe. He
is a shooter and collector as well as an author and has been called the most
knowledgeable man on antique firearms in Europe today.
The
purpose of Bailey’s latest effort is to present information both from original
research and from printed sources that shows the introduction and use of the
rifle by British forces and their allies from the 1740s to the end of the
flintlock era in the 1840s. The most interesting information in the book for
many MUZZLELOADER readers will probably be the early chapters on military
rifles during the French and Indian War, the American War of Independence and
Indian rifles in British service prior to 1783. Later chapters deal with the
somewhat better known use of rifles during the Napoleon era and later, with a
wealth of information on various models of the Baker rifle. At the end of the
book is a fascinating chapter that points the way to follow-up work, “A
Miscellany of Unexplained British Military Rifles.”
The
text of the book includes many quotes from primary sources, which helps clarify
the role of the rifle in 18th and early 19th century combat. For those of us
raised on tales of Hawkeye, Revolutionary riflemen and the hunters of Kentucky,
there may be some statements that will raise eyebrows. Bailey makes a strong
case that the rifle was not necessarily the most practical or effective weapon
in the military arsenal of the times. This is not necessarily a new insight, but
he provides some interesting period comments to support this claim. He also
offers fascinating information on some of the units that were armed with rifles
and of officers and men who served with those units. He discusses the use of
rifles by loyalist American and German units, emphasizing the composition of
these units to clarify how the rifle was seen as an integral part of the overall
British military effort, not a separate facet.
Among
the fascinating details that Bailey presents is evidence of the use of rifles by
both the Redcoats and the French and Indians at Braddock’s defeat. Maybe even
more surprising, he documents rifles being supplied to British troops originally
headed for Louisburg in 1746 (these troops were eventually rerouted to France).
He includes information on breechloaders tested by the Board of Ordinance before
the Ferguson rifle.
As
can be expected, Bailey provides useful information on proof marks, different
production models and other technical data. There is much detailed information
on the Ferguson rifle, the 1776 pattern, Jaegers and Bakers. And there are over
300 photographs, with important details shown in large, clear close-ups.
British Military Flintlock Rifles 1740–1840 has the rare quality
of being both an initial study and a “state of the art” document. It
contains much information not presented before but also leaves the reader with
many questions and a desire for more knowledge and research. It is an essential
reference for gunmakers, collectors and anyone else interested in the
development of the use of rifles in the British army and in Anglo-American
settlements.
To
order the book, write: Mowbray Publishing/Man at Arms, PO Box 460, Lincoln RI
02865-0460. You may also call (401) 726-8011 or 800-999-4697 (toll free in the
U.S.A.) or visit their website at <www.manatarmsbooks.com>.
@ 2007 ScurlockPublishing Co., Inc. All
rights reserved.