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Canadian Military Heritage
Table of Contents


CHAPTER 1
The Conquest
CHAPTER 2
The Revolt of Pontiac and the American Invasion
CHAPTER 3
The Coveted Pacific Coast
CHAPTER 4
The Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812
CHAPTER 5
Demobilization
CHAPTER 6
The Royal Navy, Ruler of the Seas
CHAPTER 7
A Decade of Turbulence
A Time of Warfare
A Weapons Revolution
The Trent Affair
Vulnerability of the Province of Canada
The St. Albans Raid
The Fenians
The Invasion of 1866
An Improved Volunteer Militia
Confederation
Canadians Forced to Defend Canada
Canadians Abroad
The Pontifical Zouaves
An Anglophile Militia
The Northwest Expedition
A Final Attempt by the Fenians
Withdrawal of British Troops from Canada
The End of an Era
APPENDIX A
The British Armed Forces
APPENDIX B
Daily Life of Soldiers and Officers
APPENDIX C
Uniforms and Arms
APPENDIX D
Reference

    
CHAPTER 7 A Decade of Turbulence

    
    
A Weapons Revolution ( 2 pages )

    
    
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From Smoothbore Musket to Breechloading Rifle
    
    
    
Armoured train equipped with artillery of the Union Army during the American Civil War.
Armoured train equipped with artillery of the Union Army during the American Civil War.
(Click image to enlarge)

The American Civil War, which could be called the first "modern" war, served as a laboratory for an impressive number of deadly new weapons such as the repeating rifle, the first torpedoes, heavy artillery on railways, and turret-mounted guns on battleships.  For the first time, trains were used to transport large numbers of troops.  Military communications by telegraph also appeared.  The rank and file of both armies were virtually all relatively untrained volunteers, but they were armed with guns of unprecedented accuracy.

Small arms had not advanced appreciably between the end of the seventeenth century and the 1830s and 1840s, when the percussion mechanism for firing was introduced.  This system, which was more reliable than the gun flint, appeared in the British army in 1836 with the adoption of the Brunswick rifle for rifle corps.  In 1838 the Guards infantry battalions sent to Canada were equipped with percussion muskets.  Because there was unanimity regarding the reliability of the weapon, its use was extended to all of the infantry within a few years.  But even though the percussion musket fired reliably, its range remained the same as that of the weapons it replaced.

It was then discovered that a conically shaped bullet fired from a rifled barrel could go much further - with greater accuracy - and this discovery revolutionized weaponry.  In 1851 part of the British army adopted the Minié rifled musket; then in 1853 the whole army chose the rifled-barrelled Enfield.  The Enfield could shoot a bullet onto a 0.9-metre target at a distance of 825 metres, and onto a 0.6-metre target from approximately 400 metres!  The Canadian volunteers were supplied with the Enfield rifled musket from 1856 onward.

However, the rifled gun was still muzzle-loaded, which meant that it could be fired only about three times per minute.  The solution for speeding up fire was simple: breech-loading, if possible, with a repeating mechanism.  Many inventions designed to do just that were tested during the American Civil War.  But repeating cavalry rifles were still too inaccurate for the infantry, which preferred a one-shot breech-loading weapon that fired accurately, approximately six shots per minute.  The Prussian army already had such a weapon; the French and American armies would have theirs in 1866.  The British army chose the breech-loading system invented by the American Jacob Snider, which could be adapted to the existing Enfield rifled muskets.  In 1867-68 some 350,000 guns of this type were modified accordingly, to become the Snider-Enfield rifle.

    
    
Additional Images
    
    
The fight of the USS Monitor and the CSS Virginia, Hampton Roads, Virginia, 9 March 1862. Model 1853 Enfield rifled musket barrel side and cross sections. Snider-Enfield breech-loading rifled musket and its mechanism, 1867.    
Click image to enlarge

    
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  Last Updated: 2004-06-20 Top of Page Important Notices