Here's a question I've not had for some time, yet cannot find an answer to:
Most reenactors favorite reproduction musket is the P53 Enfield. It's light, it's pretty, it's blued, it works for both sides throughout the entire War, and the reproductions tend to have fewer problems than their Springfield-modeled brethren.
And yet it might appear that our ancestors had a different opinion of this weapon. I don't claim to be an expert, but I have read several accounts of soldiers on both sides discarding their Enfields for Springfields. Now, there are also accounts of soldiers, notably Grant's soldiers after Vicksburg, discarding their smoothbores for Enfields, but that is understandable (I'd rather have a rifle, too) and out side the scope of my question.
The question being, is there any truth to the theory that a Civil War soldier would prefer a Springfield rifle to an Enfield (or another imported rifle such as a Lorenz), and is our love of the Enfield over the Springfield a reenactorism?
If so, I have several theories as to why this might be:
One is that spare parts for Springfields would be more readily available. Additionally, the Springfield had universally interchangeable parts, whereas the Enfield might have had interchangeable parts across a particular contractor (assuming that's true, but I've heard Enfields were still hand made), but parts might not be interchangeable between different producers.
A Springfield could fire the standard, and copies of, the Burton ball as well as Enfield-style ammunition, whereas it is much more difficult to fire a Burton ball through and Enfield after a score of rounds (if you don't believe me, try it!; those extra couple hundredths of an inch make a big difference! (Granted, they're repro muskets not quite to original specs)). The practical extension of this is the ability to fire captured ammunition.
Thoughts?
Most reenactors favorite reproduction musket is the P53 Enfield. It's light, it's pretty, it's blued, it works for both sides throughout the entire War, and the reproductions tend to have fewer problems than their Springfield-modeled brethren.
And yet it might appear that our ancestors had a different opinion of this weapon. I don't claim to be an expert, but I have read several accounts of soldiers on both sides discarding their Enfields for Springfields. Now, there are also accounts of soldiers, notably Grant's soldiers after Vicksburg, discarding their smoothbores for Enfields, but that is understandable (I'd rather have a rifle, too) and out side the scope of my question.
The question being, is there any truth to the theory that a Civil War soldier would prefer a Springfield rifle to an Enfield (or another imported rifle such as a Lorenz), and is our love of the Enfield over the Springfield a reenactorism?
If so, I have several theories as to why this might be:
One is that spare parts for Springfields would be more readily available. Additionally, the Springfield had universally interchangeable parts, whereas the Enfield might have had interchangeable parts across a particular contractor (assuming that's true, but I've heard Enfields were still hand made), but parts might not be interchangeable between different producers.
A Springfield could fire the standard, and copies of, the Burton ball as well as Enfield-style ammunition, whereas it is much more difficult to fire a Burton ball through and Enfield after a score of rounds (if you don't believe me, try it!; those extra couple hundredths of an inch make a big difference! (Granted, they're repro muskets not quite to original specs)). The practical extension of this is the ability to fire captured ammunition.
Thoughts?
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