I have been trying to find out how much ammunition a Federal trooper should carry for a Sharps carbine. I have seen photos and reproductions of carbine cartridge boxes with wooden inserts, and those hold 20 rounds. One writer claimed a trooper should carry 40 rounds. I have also seen a photo of another style of box from a Mass Cav regiment which had stacked tin inserts and held 40 rounds - but records seem to show our regiment carried the more standard carbine box. Most research I have run across refers to the box carried on the sword belt on the right; I found one book that also mentioned the boxes being attached to the carbine sling and carried on the back.
If I carry a box on the belt with a block, I can carry 20 rounds. If I carry two boxes (presumably one on the sling), that would obviously double, but I cannot find reference as to whether that was done. I can also increase my ability to carry by removing the wood block from the box - my best guess is that that's the most likely accurate answer, but I cannot find anything very definitive.
So - for a standard-equipped Eastern theater trooper in 1863 with a Sharps, how many rounds should I be carrying, and where/how?
If I carry a box on the belt with a block, I can carry 20 rounds. If I carry two boxes (presumably one on the sling), that would obviously double, but I cannot find reference as to whether that was done. I can also increase my ability to carry by removing the wood block from the box - my best guess is that that's the most likely accurate answer, but I cannot find anything very definitive.
So - for a standard-equipped Eastern theater trooper in 1863 with a Sharps, how many rounds should I be carrying, and where/how?
Comment