Here is an interesting old rifle I ran across while browsing the web. A .60 caliber slant-breech percussion Sharps!
View attachment 228489
Sixty caliber! This would have been a conical bullet, too, not a round ball... A massive projectile. A quick review of Frank Sellers' book,
Sharps Firearms, indicates some M1853 carbines were produced in 26 bore (roughly .564 caliber), but 32 bore (approximately .526 caliber) was the largest available in the M1853 sporting rifles. However, I'm pretty sure the factory would rebore customers' rifles when needed.
This rifle was listed for sale by
River Junction Trade Co. a few years ago. I don't know what it sold for. If you click that link, you will find several more photos and a good description of the rifle. I don't think they listed the weight, but I would be surprised if this old-timer would be much less than 14 pounds. The barrel is massive. We don't know its history, either, but if I had lived in the late 1850's and wanted to go after buffalo in a big way, a rifle like this would have been very desirable. I do think it is a hunting rifle, too, with those open sights.
I know Old Rust is interested primarily in professional hunters prior to 1865, but one class of people whom folks like us often ignore are settlers on the frontier... Individuals and families who went to the very edge of the civilized world to build their homes, plant grain, and raise livestock. Those who settled on the peripheries of the plains considered buffalo a resource to be harvested, and they would organize annual group hunts for the purpose of laying in a supply of meat, tallow, and hides for their personal use. You don't really see a lot about these 19th century pioneers, but I did find this interesting reference concerning the frontiersmen of northeast Texas. Here is a little of what John Hart had to say about those days:
View attachment 228496
As for their firearms, Mr. Hart said this:
View attachment 228497
"
This was when the cap and ball rifles were used, and we had to get as near as eighty or a hundred years of them to get a shot." These folks were clearly not adventurers and sportsmen like George Kendall (see post #5). A description of their guns follows:
View attachment 228498
View attachment 228499
They were "making do" with the rifles they had, and home-made powder and caps. I thought the comment about pistols was also interesting. You don't hear much about those, and I don't think many of those country-made single-shot pistols survived. There is a lot more to read in the book:
Pioneer Days in the Southwest from 1850 to 1879, by Goodnight, Dubbs, Hart, et al.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob