The Ferguson Rifle
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 4:07 pm
I first came across this rifle in a novel by Louis L’amour called appropriately, The Ferguson Rifle. It was such an interesting weapon for its time in the late 1770’s that it sparked my interest and prompted me to do some digging. The performance of this weapon in it’s time must have seemed amazing. I am sharing the information here with fellow IFG’ians.
The Ferguson, Breech Loading, Flintlock Rifle, standard British carbine ball of .615 caliber
Developed by Major Patrick Ferguson, the breech loading Ferguson Rifle had the potential to eliminate the great disadvantages of the muzzle loaders of the period. Ferguson's rifle combined the speed of a musket with the accuracy of a rifle. Ferguson was able to load and fire as many as six rounds per minute, hitting targets at up to 200 yards and hitting a bulls-eye at 100 yards from a prone position.
Only about 100 Ferguson Rifles were produced, only a few originals survive today.
The development of this rifle was abandoned after Ferguson’s death.
Sources & Links:
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferguson_rifle
National Park Service Display http://www.nps.gov/history/history/onli ... /hh22m.htm
Write up http://www.11thpa.org/ferguson.html
Article on firing a reproduction http://johno.myiglou.com/ferguson.htm
Timed Firing Youtube - by Rick Roberts – an astounding 7 shots per minute
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2CFFkg-_UI
The Ferguson, Breech Loading, Flintlock Rifle, standard British carbine ball of .615 caliber
Developed by Major Patrick Ferguson, the breech loading Ferguson Rifle had the potential to eliminate the great disadvantages of the muzzle loaders of the period. Ferguson's rifle combined the speed of a musket with the accuracy of a rifle. Ferguson was able to load and fire as many as six rounds per minute, hitting targets at up to 200 yards and hitting a bulls-eye at 100 yards from a prone position.
Only about 100 Ferguson Rifles were produced, only a few originals survive today.
The development of this rifle was abandoned after Ferguson’s death.
Sources & Links:
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferguson_rifle
National Park Service Display http://www.nps.gov/history/history/onli ... /hh22m.htm
Write up http://www.11thpa.org/ferguson.html
Article on firing a reproduction http://johno.myiglou.com/ferguson.htm
Timed Firing Youtube - by Rick Roberts – an astounding 7 shots per minute
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2CFFkg-_UI