Ballard Rifle | |
---|---|
Place of origin | United States |
Service history | |
Used by | Union (American Civil War) |
Wars | American Civil War |
Production history | |
Designer | Charles H. Ballard |
Designed | November 1861 |
Manufacturer |
Ball & Williams R. Ball & Co. Dwight, Chapin & Co. Merrimack Arms and Manufacturing Co. Brown Manufacturing Co. Marlin Firearms |
Produced | 1862-1891 |
No. built | Around 21,000+ (1862-1873) by various firms and then 40,000 by J.M Marlin and the Marlin Firearms Co. |
Variants |
No. 0 and No. 1 Hunter's Rifle No. 1 1/2 Hunter's Rifle No. 1 3/4 Far West No. 2 Sporting No. 3 Gallery Rifle No. 3 Pistol Grip Rifle No. 3 1/2 Target No. 4 Perfection No. 4 1/4 No. 4 1/2 Mid Range No. 4 1/2 A-1 Mid Range No. 5 Pacific No. 5 1/2 Montana No. 6 Schuetzen No. 6 1/2 Off-Hand No. 6 1/2 Rigby Off-Hand No. 6 1/2 Pistol Grip Off-Hand No. 7 Long Range No. 7 A-1 Long Range No. 7 A-1 Extra Long Range No. 8 Union Hill No. 9 Union Hill No. 10 Schuetzen Junior |
Specifications | |
Mass |
10.07 lbs (No. 1 Hunter's Model) 9 lbs (No. 2 Sporting Model) 10-12 lbs (No . 5 Pacific Model) |
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Caliber |
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The Ballard Rifle was a single shot, breechloading longarm used during the late American Civil War by Kentucky volunteers.[1]
History[]
The Ballard Rifle was designed and patented by Charles H. Ballard in November 1861 in Worcester, Massachusetts.[1] Around 3,000 were made between 1862 and 1865, with some being used for military use in Kentucky.[1] Ballard rifles used by Kentucky Volunteers will have Kentucky marked on them.
Variants[]
Variants were built by Ball & Williams (1862–1865), Dwight Chapin & Co. (1862–1863), and later by R. Ball & Co. (1865–1867), Merrimack Arms (1867–68), and Brown Manufacturing (1869–1873). The last and most successful maker was J.M. Marlin Firearms Co., who built more models than any predecessor (1870–1890).
The Ballard rifle had over 20 variants during its 29-year lifespan.[2] The No. 1 Hunter's Model was first introduced in 1875 for the .44 rimfire caliber.[3] The No. 1 would later be produced in .44 rimfire, .45-70 Government, .44 Ballard Long, & .44 Ballard Extra Long.[2] This version along with the No. 5 1⁄2 Montana are known for being one of the main rifles used to hunt buffalo.[3] Other variants included the No. 1 3⁄4¾ Hunter's Model, No. 2 Sporting Model, No. 5 Pacific Model, and the No. 5 1⁄2 Montana Model.[2][3]
See also[]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Original, Civil War Period< Ballard Military Rifle — Horse Soldier". http://www.horsesoldier.com/products/firearms/longarms/14757.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Designs, Jack A Rains, Arco Iris Web. "History of Ballard Rifles". http://cap-n-ball.com/ballard.htm.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "The Marlin-Ballard Pacific and Montana Rifles Appeared as the Buffalo Disappeared" (in en-US). http://www.historynet.com/marlin-ballard-pacific-montana-rifles-appeared-buffalo-disappeared.htm.
The original article can be found at Ballard Rifle and the edit history here.