Actually, I seem to remembet one British defender of "No. 96" in South Carolina giving a good account of himself using patches in his smoothbore. He reportedly was shooting a Brown Bess downwards toward Patriot forces, using very tightly stuffed patched balls. The patching allowed him not only to retain the ball in the barrel for downwards shooting, but also to deliver his shots with surprising accuracy.
I will need to look this up, but I believe it was referenced in some NPS research and literature.
At any rate, the event evidently DID occur, and has been documented and studied.
OK....
Let’s really look at this with the info we have.
This is what I would be looking for.
“I loaded my musket with cloth patches in the manor of a rifle.”
Now when you get into “that guy used cloth”.... How did he use it?
A witness sometimes 50 years later can make the fellow do a lot of stuff. Some of this can be assumptions.
He used cloth, so the assumption is he used it in the manner of rifles.
OK....
Very tightly stuffed patched balls. I know you are quoting from memory but the terminology seems odd to me.
This would make more sense....
“Very tightly stuffed packed ball”
^^^
From the info provided, this sounds more like cloth used as wadding. Stuffed?????
Again, that sounds more like wadding.
You can’t always trust the NPS as gospel. There’s the whole Liberty Valance truth vs legend thing.
Agreed. This man's accuracy with the musket, as I remember from the archaeology and the description, was quite surprising, especially given that he was shooting down from an elevated position. At the same time, the data seem to indicate a SINGLE shooter, as opposed to the use of this technique by multiple troops. Two possible explanations being that he a: had done, or at least pondered, this before; or b: it was a technique he, or someone he had seen, studied, etc., had tried previously.
As historic archaeology texts can be a bit arcane, this may take some work. I DO know I read it in the last 3-4 years, and that some of the work was approaching the level used in tracking the individual Lakota warrior at the Greasy Grass whose unique firing pin signature allowed his movements to be documented by researchers 120+ years later...
Will post as soon as I find it. Enjoying the discussion...
I would look forward to reading this.
You mention the Little Big Horn rifle.
For more than a century that battle had a narrative built off of assumptions and maybe less than accurate witness accounts.
It was assumed that a skirmish line was set on that portion of the battlefield. Archeology tended to agree with that.
The forensic evidence showed the same rifle being used along the assumed “skirmish line”.....
It was not a skirmish line at all. The forensics show that it was a running fight or more accurately a running “flight”.
This tends to agree with some of the native accounts.
This is an example of, there’s what’s said vs what really happened.