CoyoteJoe said:
I've seen the "experts" on the History Channel time and again proclaim the Civil War muskets were accurate to 300 yards or more. I know that modern day competition shooters do obtain that kind of accuracy. I also know that it requires bullets perfectly cast and sized to fit the individual rifle bore, with powder carefully worked up for that rifle.
We know from examining old cartridges that the "issue ammo" from the war varied greatly. Bullets were commonly .005" under size and some more than .010" undersized, out of round, with casting flaws, etc. Then the Ammo was roughly handled, adding more damage to the poor bullet. Add in the fact that bores were not held to exacting standards and the soldier's ammo was likely to be a very poor fit to his rifle.
So, my question for the experts on this forum: How accurate was the as-issued rifle with as-issued ammo? I suspect those soldiers issued the out-dated smoothbore musket were not so terribly handicapped in battlefield reality. :grin:
How accurate? 300 yards? The smart allec might answer "As accurate as it needed to be". A thoughtful person would say, "The rifle musket could hit a target 18 inches square (the size of a man's chest) at 100 yards most of the time, even with bad ammunition." The realist would say, "It depends". Let's take the realist's point of view:
(1) Given good ammunition and a good condition bore, your accuracy will be about as good as a trained rifleman can hold it and the 18 inch square target is a good one to count on. But remember, the gun begins to foul after about three shots and becomes difficult to load, dropping your loading time to 2 shots per minute from the military standard of 3. But your target is getting bigger and seemingly more numerous. :shocked2: Oh, oh...
(2) You are being shot at. More often than not, you have no cover and people on both sides of you are getting shot. Adrenalin is pumping and under those conditions, screams from the wounded and maniacal yells are common ”“ there goes your concentration with you mess mate grabbing at your leg begging for help after having half his face blown off by a .58 cal. slug and your ability to load is quickly going down to one and one half rounds per minute and that is not necessarily well aimed fire ”“ you just wish that your enemy was at 300 yards because you and he have been slowly closing on each other in ranks by command (Damnation, another distraction!!) since you started shooting at each other at 100 yards. So, no matter how cool, calm and collected you may be at the weekend shoot where you are shooting against 10 or twelve others or at an N-SSA National at Ft. Shenandoah, things are different when the target is alive and it has murder in its heart.
(3) Now, let’s go back to (1) for a moment ”“ in that I made use of the words “trained rifleman”. We have to remember that the VAST majority of Civil War soldiers were not “trained riflemen” and usually had no idea if they hit what they aimed at and really didn’t care ”“ there was no score at the end of the day, only survival for the lucky. The myth of the superbly accurate shooting of the American soldier has always been just that, a myth. A soldier was trained to load and fire his gun as efficiently as possible and that gave him more confidence in his ability than anything else, hitting a target, even if not the one aimed at, was icing on the cake. In other words, you could learn to be steady under fire through experience but that experience was always tempered with the thought of the next time and what it might bring. This applies to both sides, Northern and Southern, city boy or farm raised ”“ it’s a different world.
(4) We are talking about two armies armed with the rifle musket and a few smoothbores (not a bad weapon at all under 100 yards) on both sides thrown in for good measure. The new made arms are made under war time pressure with the demand to get them out the door as quickly as possible so sighting problems will happen, bore dimensions may not be as close to standard as that of a peace-time product and the ammunition will be of all different configurations and diameters with powder charges that will vary by a grain or two (or three, maybe more) and there is always the chance that you will drop a few grains on the ground while loading with shaking hands.
So, how accurate was the rifle musket? I would almost have to say that the smart alec’s answer would be the one I would go with: As accurate as it needed to be. And I might add, be glad that the sergeant didn’t let you throw away that bayonet; you’ll need it at the end! (But that’s another thread.) Don’t worry about the 300-yard target; the rifle musket’s accuracy was good enough to hit a target the size of a man on a horse at 900 yards. And that’s a quote from the manual”¦
:snore: I know, rambling again. :winking: