The arms and armor exhibit in the Philadelphia museum of art was closed for renovations, but the museum of the American Revolution had some interesting rifles on display and was overall a great museum.
It looks they did lolNice.
Did they put someone’s actual headstone in there?
I did a double take when I passed them. “Those are some weird muskets… wait wow!!!”Wow, an actual Ferguson and a 1776 Pattern Infantry rifle.
Captain Michael Cresap of a Maryland Rifle Coy. He died of an illness in New York City marching on his was to the siege of Boston.Yes! Michael Chrisps infamous words…who’s for the camp at Cambridge!!
I wondered about that Ferguson when I saw the picture. I have heard the only two military model Fergusons are at Monmouth and the other in a library either in Detroit or Minnesota. I also heard that Narragansett was able to disassemble the one in the library to make wax castings when they built their copy in the late '90s early 2000s. Don't know if that is correct or not. It seems I heard or read somewhere once that the Fergusons at those locations were carried up north by Union troops returning home after the war. The theory was some of Ferguson's riflemen kept their rifles when Ferguson's unit was broken up and carried them back to their regiments , where they were apparently captured in the Southern theater. I believe the Ferguson at King's Mountain is a sporting model.Hi,
They have a good interactive computer display for many of the arms. That is not an ordnance issued Ferguson. It is a privately made and purchased rifle.
dave
The Ferguson gets all the attention, but the Pattern 1776 is the more important gun. It is the grandaddy of the Baker rifle. Its introduction probably convinced many an upcoming British infantry officer of the utility of rifle armed light troops. The Ferguson was too delicate and expensive to be a practical military rifle. The stock was too thin around the breech to survive bayonet fighting. Some German Jagers were armed with rifles that had bayonet lugs and bayonet exactly like the Baker wound up with in 1800. Military muskets and rifles have double as clubs.I did a double take when I passed them. “Those are some weird muskets… wait wow!!!”
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