I love it when people detached by decades upon decades doubt the words of contemporaries.
Those contemporaries wrote pure baloney then just as modern folks do now.
Lewis Wentzel is one of those personalities that the more you dig, the less you actually know about the man.
Some of the stuff is just so “over the top” that the truth is really hard to discern.
The guy is an enigma.
Most who study 18th Century history agree that Wentzel could reload his rifle at a sprint or at a dead run.
Just how he actually did it....we really don’t know. I think his contemporaries knew very little of how exactly how he did it.
Tap loading is certainly possible, maybe even likely, but a measured and rammed load is a possibility as well.
Wentzel’s skill is noted to be exceptional. We have to ask, is tap loading exceptional????
Let’s pull away from Wentzel and look at other sources.....
Smaller ball for quick loading.....
There are some accounts recommending small ball sometimes polished or worked for rapid loading of a rifle.
Duane’s Handbook for Riflemen recommends smaller ball for quicker loading as well as cartridges for rapid fire.
Duane’s book was heavily criticized then but it does offer some possible insight.
Duane’s work is somewhat plagiarized from British and French sources with a little “Caintucky lore” thrown in......
1811 account “Creek War”......
A young girl witnessed her father sewing buckskin patches around lead ball for quick loading from his pouch......
(Alabama Department of Archives and History)
I find the above account very interesting. Here we have a man preparing for quick loads.
Just from the info presented so far....
Wentzel could reload on the run.
Smaller ball including bare ball are mentioned.
Prepared loads such as sewn patched ball mentioned.
Cartridges mentioned in Duane’s book. Cartridges are interested because it was a known practice for military arms. Duane’s book suggests cartridges and a box to be used with the rifleman’s pouch.
All I’m saying is, there is a lot to this when this onion is peeled.
My personal dabbling into experimental archeology concerning rapid rifle loading.....
Right now the big challenge I see for me is the rammer.
The rammer can be pulled and rammed down rather easily. For me the big trick is returning it. That’s where I fumble....
Returning the ramrod quickly and efficiently.
I’ll post more on this....
It is rather interesting.