I still stand behind my previous post. If cylinder swapping did happen, I believe it an extreme rarity. Battle shirts with pockets for paper cartridges not extra cylinders, the difficulty and the time consumed during swithching cylinders instead of just grabbing another pistol or one's saber, the lack of archeological evidence showing us all these "extra cylinders" all point to the lack of use of extra cylinders.
I have checked all of my reference books on arms and equipment of the " Late Unpleasantness" and have found nothing mentioned about extra cylinders, nor in any photos I have of arms and equipment have I found anything remotely resembling an appropriate leather accoutrement to carry a cylinder.
And as far as the Texas Ranger taking the sideplate off of his Winchester, any Marine will tell you that they are taught to dissassemble their weapon, and then reassemble it, blindfolded. Manila Joe Basilone spent a good part of a battle at Guadalcanal doing just that with several .30 cal. machine guns. Underfire and with no other light than that which came from the tracers of machineguns overhead. A lot of Vietnam vets will tell you how they had to do it with their M-16s when they were first issued.
About 10 years ago I brought a Garand. My dad, who had not picked one up since 1953 or so( and a Marine) was able to take it apart and then put it back together. Strictly from a 40+ year memory. Heck, just about every veteran that I showed it to, Marine or Army, could, and did.
I have checked all of my reference books on arms and equipment of the " Late Unpleasantness" and have found nothing mentioned about extra cylinders, nor in any photos I have of arms and equipment have I found anything remotely resembling an appropriate leather accoutrement to carry a cylinder.
And as far as the Texas Ranger taking the sideplate off of his Winchester, any Marine will tell you that they are taught to dissassemble their weapon, and then reassemble it, blindfolded. Manila Joe Basilone spent a good part of a battle at Guadalcanal doing just that with several .30 cal. machine guns. Underfire and with no other light than that which came from the tracers of machineguns overhead. A lot of Vietnam vets will tell you how they had to do it with their M-16s when they were first issued.
About 10 years ago I brought a Garand. My dad, who had not picked one up since 1953 or so( and a Marine) was able to take it apart and then put it back together. Strictly from a 40+ year memory. Heck, just about every veteran that I showed it to, Marine or Army, could, and did.