Engineering:Model 1814 common rifle

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United States M1814 rifle
US Model 1814 Johnson made.jpg, Derringer Model 1814 common rifle.jpg
A percussion converted R. Johnson made US Model 1814 rifle.
TypeMuzzle-loading rifle
Place of originUnited States
Service history
Used byUnited States
WarsSeminole Wars, American Civil War
Production history
DesignerMarine T. Wickham
Designed1814
ManufacturerGunsmiths Henry Deringer, R. Johnson
Produced1814–?
Specifications
Length49 in (1,200 mm)
Barrel length33 in (840 mm)
Width2.75 in (70 mm)
Height7 in (180 mm)

Cartridge.54 ball, black powder, paper
Calibre0.54 in (14 mm)
ActionFlintlock/percussion lock (conversion)
Rate of fire2–3 per minute
Feed systemMuzzle-loaded

The U.S. M1814 rifle was designed by Robert T. Wickham. The manufacturing was contracted out to Henry Deringer and R. Johnson to make rifles for use by the military.

Types

Wickham type

This was the U.S. M1814 rifle designed by Robert T. Wickham.[1] Two manufacturers made this type, Henry Deringer of Philadelphia and R. Johnston of Connecticut.[1] Wickham sent the pattern to Deringer with a contract for 1000 rifles. One of Deringer's rifles was then sent to R. Johnson to be duplicated, with a contract for 1000 more. It was mounted with iron and had an oval patch box. It had a 33-inch barrel, octagon near the flintlock, turning to round, and using a .54 caliber bullet.[1]

Buttstock from R Johnson M1814.jpg

Pre-production rifle

Not the M1814, but a rifle of Deringer's design. It was closer to a Pennsylvania–Kentucky style rifle than a military styled rifle.[2] Deringer began making these rifles for the army before winning the 1814 contract making 51 rifles that were accepted for military service.[2] One example of these rifles survives today.[2] Unlike the Wickam type, the pre-production model was not iron mounted.[2] The rifle is full stocked, with a 38-inch barrel that is octagon near the flintlock and becomes round about a third of the way down the barrel. It had a long-rectangular bronze patch box mounted in the buttstock.[2]

Indian rifle

A smoothbore version was also under contract with the government as a trade rifle, for sales to the Native Americans. The government wanted approximations of long rifles, but did not want them to have rifled weapons.[3]

Barrel and rifling.jpg

Use during the American Civil War

The rifles saw use during the American Civil War. Company A of the 2nd Mississippi Infantry carried these rifles, converted to percussion cap.[4]

Note the rifle lock; this rifle was converted to percussion cap. The original would have been a flintlock. The percussion-cap lock still has Johnson's name engraved on it.

See also

References