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Henry Repeater

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  • #16
    Re: Henry Repeater

    Hallo!

    "Any way you look at it, reenactments seem to have WAY too many Henry's."

    Mr. Schmidt,
    Yours is an interesting comment, I've yet to see a Henry at any CA event I've attended, maybe folks hide 'em.


    Ah, but it was not my comment... ;)

    I would point out:

    "Basically, this means, on average, that for every 1 Henry at an event, there should be 42 Spencers, 32 Burnsides, 2 Halls, 6 Joslyns, 8 Merrills, 15 Maynards, 50 Sharps and 2 Warners. Any way you look at it, reenactments seem to have WAY too many Henry's."

    while an interesting mathematical "tally," IMHO, I would not say "there should be" X number of any particular type of carbine present . Historical units were armed with what units were armed with at any given place and time. And if one's impression or recreated unit was armed with a particular "make" of weapon then the numbers of other arms overall will not be an indicator of that unit's arms.

    ;)

    No Smith carbine armed units? :-)

    Curt
    Curt Schmidt
    In gleichem Schritt und Tritt, Curt Schmidt

    -Hard and sharp as flint...secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster.
    -Haplogroup R1b M343 (Subclade R1b1a2 M269)
    -Pointless Folksy Wisdom Mess, Oblio Lodge #1
    -Vastly Ignorant
    -Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Henry Repeater

      Originally posted by Drygoods View Post
      and a bit more from my husband, not working on the eve of the holiday:D
      As I sit idly here, waiting for my computer to finish, I thought I'd do some more research on Henry rifles.

      This is interesting, considering that the U.S. bought only 1,731 Henry's:

      Carbine Purchased Carbine Purchased
      Spencer 73,196 Merrill 14,495
      Ballard 1,509 Maynard 25,202
      Burnsides 55,567 Remington 2,000
      Cosmopolitan 1,140 Sharps 86,512
      Gibbs 1,052 Starr 20,601
      Hall 3,520 Warner 4,001
      Joslyn 10,200
      Basically, this means, on average, that for every 1 Henry at an event, there should be 42 Spencers, 32 Burnsides, 2 Halls, 6 Joslyns, 8 Merrills, 15 Maynards, 50 Sharps and 2 Warners. Any way you look at it, reenactments seem to have WAY too many Henry's.

      Inquiring minds might want to know.
      Henry's were largely private purchesed......Colts Revolving Rifles as well....I note a few type of carbines that were in the hands of Volunteer Cavalry and you don't mention them.... What was ISSUED by the US QM was not the same was what was used in the field. Henry Rifles were private, not US Purchased/issued....hence your number's cited are incorrect. My Great Great Great Uncle, Charles Converse, was a bugler in the horseless 27th NY Cavalry at Petersburg June 1864.....they used Smith carbines.....no horses.

      One of the areas that we do not do well on is having CPH events with the correct weaponry for the unit that we are portraying......too much of a mixture of enfield's versus Springfield's.....instead of having 90%+ be one specific weapon....or having a correct mix of weapons by company to match the historical record.

      You analysis/logic is faulty.....as well as your ratios.
      RJ Samp
      (Mr. Robert James Samp, Junior)
      Bugle, Bugle, Bugle

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Henry Repeater

        I agree with William. Terry has been extremely helpful and very generous with his time in helping me move to a Cavalry impression.
        I wasn’t aware that Taylor’s even sold seconds. I will have to ask them about that when they open Wednesday.
        And I received a very nasty private message from Civilwarcaptain that really said some very nasty and untrue things about Terry. I think that William is right and this is that Mike G. guy that got kicked off this and other boards for shady deals.
        As far as the caliber of the Spencer is concerned it is true that 44-40 is not the historically correct one. But those using a Spencer in 56-50 are using blanks that are made entirely out of plastic. At least the blanks made from 410 hulls are partially made out of brass.
        Also did we read the same article about the Spencers. I don’t remember him ever saying anything about using a 69 caliber box for Spencer blanks.
        Bob
        Last edited by Bob Taylor; 01-01-2008, 06:04 PM.
        Bob Taylor

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Henry Repeater

          Great pic mark.Where in the world did you find that?
          You should have posted a disclaimer with it, tho, somebody "authenticity challenged" might be lurking out there and consider it Documentation!! :)
          Just a private soldier trying to make a difference

          Patrick Peterson
          Old wore out Bugler

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Henry Repeater

            Mr Schmidt,
            It was the any way cph I was kidding about.
            Mfr,
            Judith Peebles.
            No Wooden Nutmegs Sold Here.
            [B]Books![B][/B][/B] The Original Search Engine.

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Henry Repeater

              Originally posted by csabugler View Post
              Great pic mark.Where in the world did you find that?
              You should have posted a disclaimer with it, tho, somebody "authenticity challenged" might be lurking out there and consider it Documentation!! :)
              "Google Images" is a thing of beauty. Just type in "Wanted Dead or Alive" (Steve's old TV Western series) and you'll get lots of images.

              Very truly yours, &c.,

              Mark Jaeger
              Regards,

              Mark Jaeger

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Henry Repeater

                Originally posted by Bob Taylor View Post
                But those using a Spencer in 56-50 are using blanks that are made entirely out of plastic.
                Not exactly true......

                Shooting and reloading brass blanks for the 56-50 is possible. I do it. It takes a little work and a little patience, but is possible, economical, and very fun.

                -Ryan Dupree

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Henry Repeater

                  Originally posted by Alabama Yankee View Post
                  Not exactly true......

                  Shooting and reloading brass blanks for the 56-50 is possible. I do it. It takes a little work and a little patience, but is possible, economical, and very fun.

                  -Ryan Dupree
                  Ryan
                  Then you are the exception and not the rule. I for one would be very interested in how you make economical brass blanks for the 56-50 Spencer. I am always ready to talk Spencers with anyone.
                  Bob
                  Bob Taylor

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Henry Repeater

                    Originally posted by Bob Taylor View Post
                    .....I wasn’t aware that Taylor’s even sold seconds. I will have to ask them about that when they open Wednesday......
                    Bob
                    To all
                    I checked with Taylors and they told me that they don’t sell seconds. If they get a defective gun they try to fix it and if they can’t fix it they send it back to the factory. Every once in a wile they will have a scratch and dent sale and advertise it as such but they never sell seconds.
                    Bob
                    Bob Taylor

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Spencer Blanks

                      I actually own a spencer from Taylors, and it was a "scratch and dent"

                      It was missing an extractor , and it was 56-50.

                      Regarding blanks, I use 56-50 brass and pick them up, and reload after use.

                      The brass cost about 2.00 each, but last a long time.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Spencer Blanks

                        Originally posted by Sharpshooter1 View Post
                        I actually own a spencer from Taylors, and it was a "scratch and dent"

                        It was missing an extractor , and it was 56-50.

                        Regarding blanks, I use 56-50 brass and pick them up, and reload after use.

                        The brass cost about 2.00 each, but last a long time.
                        Tom
                        The nice thing about using a Spencer in 44-40 is that you can make blanks from 410 hulls and when they have been fired you don’t have to stop to pick them up. I have to applaud you adherence to the authentic caliber but how do you get them to cycle in your gun? With the Spencer being so sensitive to case length a standard size brass would not work unless you loaded as a single shot. I actually envy you. I don’t have one yet but I hope to have one by next Spring.
                        Bob
                        Bob Taylor

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Henry Repeater

                          Bob,

                          It is a pain in the A@#... To say the least. I would be interested in using the chopped down hulls. Who do I contact?

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Henry Repeater

                            Hallo!

                            Moderator hat on...

                            This thread has wandered away from the "relating directly to authentic cavalry living history and reenacting" of this folder:

                            Discussions on a wide variety of issues relating directly to authentic cavalry living history and reenacting.

                            It is being closed. For those lads wishing to continue, please continue via e-mail or PM.

                            Thanks.

                            Curt Schmidt
                            Moderator
                            Curt Schmidt
                            In gleichem Schritt und Tritt, Curt Schmidt

                            -Hard and sharp as flint...secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster.
                            -Haplogroup R1b M343 (Subclade R1b1a2 M269)
                            -Pointless Folksy Wisdom Mess, Oblio Lodge #1
                            -Vastly Ignorant
                            -Often incorrect, technically, historically, factually.

                            Comment

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