In the foreground we have a Colt Bulldog Model 1877 Gatling Gun, and in the background is the US Navy variant of the Colt Gatling Gun (1884), both are .45-70 calibre. Note the robust pedestal mounting and different barrel and magazine arrangements on the Naval variant.
Detail of the rear of the US Navy model
Naval variant in profile
Rear view of the Model 1877:
Manufacturer's stamp detail
Authentic packing crate for the Model 1887 - clearly it took a little time to bring into action off the march
“It occurred to me that if I could invent a machine — a gun — which could, by rapidity of fire, enable one man to do as much battle duty as a hundred, that it would, to a great extent, supersede the necessity of large armies.”
- — Richard Gatling, inventor of “the first reliable machinegun,” 1877 (as quoted in The Economist, June 14)
Foreground: not a Gatling gun but a 2 barrelled Gardner Gun, .45 calibre, used from 1874
Background: Colt Gatling Gun Navy Model 1900, .30-40 calibre, mounted on a modified M1895 Naval Landing Party carriage
Gatling Battery Gun Model 1866, .50-70 calibre, on an original carriage mount:
This one is one with the barrel casing removed but is unmarked for design or patent date. It was used in the movies War Wagon and The Outlaw Josey Wales
Hope you find this of interest, I certainly did! More period weaponry pics to come
"Whatever happens we have got,
the Gatling gun and they have not."
the Gatling gun and they have not."
- Hillaire Belloc |
Cool !
ReplyDeleteThat’s a nice series of photos of the venerable Gatling Gun. Not many other real guns are so romantically Steampunk. You might be amused with a pseudo-historical Harpers print I made a few years back that has Gatlings as a central theme: https://www.flickr.com/photos/coastconfan/5421752330/ a higher resolution version on Flicker is here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/coastconfan/5421752330/ .
ReplyDeleteOften overlooked are Nordenfeldt guns, used primarily shipboard. Wikipedia has a small article but does illustrate a sailor firing on in a period steel engraving. It too is very Steampunk. Keep up the good work!
Thanks, I really like that - "First Gulf War" indeed :-D
ReplyDeleteThere are indeed other period weapons of note. Look out for further instalments in this series soon!
Very nice! I always enjoyed The War Wagon. Grand photos!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting post, thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteInteresting photos, thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI find naval museums fascinating. The Chatham Historical Royal Dockyard has a ship with Nordenfeldts mounted on the bow.
ReplyDelete