• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Carbines

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

BruceHuxford

40 Cal
Joined
Nov 16, 2022
Messages
185
Reaction score
291
Location
Massachusetts
Were carbines used during the American Revolution to the early fur trade out west, I'm developing a new persona but want to use a carbines? Or were they strictly used and developed during the Civil War and after?
 
Oh no. Kevin Gladysz quotes several estate inventories of French Canadians in his book The French Trade Gun in North America where the deceased had owned a carbine. This being before 1763, mind you.
 
I have a Charleyville smoothbore dragoon carbine, so I don't know what your problem is with smoothbores with short barrels.
 
The meaning of carbine according to Online Etymology:

a short rifle (in 19c. especially one adapted for mounted troops), 1580s, from French carabine (Middle French carabin), used of light horsemen and also of the weapon they carried; it is of uncertain origin, perhaps from Medieval Latin Calabrinus "Calabrian" (i.e., "rifle made in Calabria"). A less-likely theory (Gamillscheg, etc.) connects it to Old French escarrabin "corpse-bearer during the plague," literally (probably) "carrion beetle," said to have been an epithet for archers from Flanders.

also from 19c.
 
Back
Top