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Info on French 1822 Musket

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  • Info on French 1822 Musket

    Pards,

    Does anyone have any information as to what units were issued with the French Model 1822 conversion musket, or howe common they were anywhere? I bought one last august and the story that came with it said it was an Iron brigade peice. I honestly don't believe it, but I'm sure there are people here who can answer that. I also wonder if the US actually had .72 cal ammo for the french '22's and rebored '42's. that would be an interesting ammo box to see.

    If anyone wants to see pics of it, follow this link and scroll down,


    Thanks in advance,

  • #2
    Re: Info on French 1822 Musket

    Hi Ian,

    I am by no means an expert on the French pattern 1822 family of weapons but I do own one so I'll post what I've been able to determine.

    First, I don't think all the original pieces of that pattern were .72 cal. Mine is a smoothbore .69. As you might know, the French had standardized their arms to .69 cal quote some time before this pattern so I wonder if the .72 that you linked to was originally .69 as well. (Perhaps Curt can chime in on this.)

    Regarding units using them, I've run into a lot problems determining that. The difficulty lays in that period Ordnance returns are cooperative enough to use our terms for such arms. This problem is excerbated by the fact that the Belgians produced arms of the same pattern. So, one can find "Converted Belgian Musket," "Converted French Musket," "French Musket", "Belgian Musket" etc... in returns. In some of these cases, are they talking about French pattern 1842 muskets? I don't know.

    As a rule of thumb, I generally considered references to "converted" Belgian or French muskets to be off this type. I know such assumptions can be dangerous, but sometimes a conjectural argument is the best we have.
    John Stillwagon

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    • #3
      Re: Info on French 1822 Musket

      "I am by no means an expert on the French pattern 1822 family of weapons but I do own one so I'll post what I've been able to determine.

      "First, I don't think all the original pieces of that pattern were .72 cal. Mine is a smoothbore .69. As you might know, the French had standardized their arms to .69 cal quote some time before this pattern so I wonder if the .72 that you linked to was originally .69 as well. (Perhaps Curt can chime in on this.)

      "Regarding units using them, I've run into a lot problems determining that. The difficulty lays in that period Ordnance returns are cooperative enough to use our terms for such arms. This problem is excerbated by the fact that the Belgians produced arms of the same pattern. So, one can find "Converted Belgian Musket," "Converted French Musket," "French Musket", "Belgian Musket" etc... in returns. In some of these cases, are they talking about French pattern 1842 muskets? I don't know.

      "As a rule of thumb, I generally considered references to "converted" Belgian or French muskets to be off this type. I know such assumptions can be dangerous, but sometimes a conjectural argument is the best we have."

      Ian,

      Like John, I am somewhat of a student of these arms stretching back into the 18th Century as well. Likewise, I have my limits in expertise in the area. Nevertheless, for what it's worth I offer the following. As you may know, our earliest American-made arms were based on French weapons. I do not think your weapon was made in .72 cal. but that it has become .72 cal from its original .69 cal standard French caliber through use and the passage of time. I also share John's and others' frustrations as the precise descriptive terms that we use today seem not to have been as important to our forebears when applied to the various arms. And, interesting to note, what may have been taken as "French" conversion arms may very well have been unmarked contractor arms made on the "French pattern" as applied to early conversion models.

      Who knows for certain? Certainly no one above ground. It may be that you have an early war Iron Brigade piece. I'm certainly not one to say as I am not an Iron Brigade student. Nonetheless, the old smoothbores were widely used even into mid- and late-war by both sides. I have in hand a personal account of a veteran of SC troops who took Federal shot ( as in buckshot ) lodged in his temple at Gettysburg. Some items just fall in the gray area of what we'll never know. But if it's been shot out to a .72 from a .69, someone used it pretty regularly for something.
      David Culberson
      The Rowdy Pards

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Info on French 1822 Musket

        I probably should have noted this on my original post. I believe that it was originally a .69 smoothbore, but was rebored and rifled to .72 cal. there is still very clear and clean rifleing in the barrel. I also have a french '42 that shared the same fate.

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