History says otherwiseM.D. said:I've read that Howard discovered fulminate in 1800 as well but doubt the impetus was fowl shooting. The story goes that he noticed fowl were given to much advanced warning from the pan flash that allowed them to escape before the ignition and shot string got to them. I think that is nonsense personally. Birds are quick, but not that quick.
I think it far more likely the discovery was motivated by a lucrative military contract possibility. Especially after Rev Forsyth patented the percussion cap from the fulminate discovery. Mike D.
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1) Forsyth did not patent the the percussion cap - he invented the percussion pill bottle ignition. John Shaw and others are credited with the percussion cap system in the early to mid 1820's and it was quickly adapted by sportsmen both in Europe and America
"In 1827 the "American Shooter's Manual" noted that eastern sportsman were almost exclusively using shotguns fitted with percussion locks."
The US gov't did adapt the percussion cap for the Indian trade by the early to mid 1830's.
"In Sept 1831 and again in December 1833, the US government ordered for the Western Indian trade, some 2150 guns from Deringer. One shipment included," 217 percussion and 93 flintlock rifles complete, at $12.50 each: 217,000 percussion caps at 80 cents per thousand; [and] 310 woolen covers at 37 1/2 cts......" - the Indians though returned the percussion guns for flint locks.
3) The first military gun that I know of that used the percussion system was the Hall breechloading rifle in 1834, not a widely used firearm though. The M-1841 Mississippi rifle (not built until 1842) was the first standard U.S. rifle to use a percussion lock system. This developed into the M 1855 and later the M 1861 Springfield.
4) European military as well as the USA did not adapt the percussion cap for wide use until the early 1840's, but it took years to replace the flinters. During the Mexican War of 1846-48 - a period of around 15 years from the introduction of the percussion cap, for instance flint lock firearms far outnumbered the percussion guns on both sides.
The Austrians adopted the standard percussion musket cap in 1854, albeit the regular cap was used prior to that by various govt's