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Spencer Lever Action Repeating Carbine
The Spencer Carbine made its appearance during the Civil War, and many of these government-purchased arms were re-issued in the 1870s for service on the frontier. These guns utilized a spring-loaded seven-shot tube magazine that was located in the buttstock. In post-war models, a patented magazine cut-off prevented the breechblock from traveling far enough to the rear to accept a magazine-fed cartridge. This allowed soldiers to load and fire single rounds, with the ammunition contained in the magazine kept in reserve. The serial number on this carbine indicates it was made c.1863-1865 in cal. .52 rimfire (56-56) and converted by Springfield Armory c. 1867-1874 to .50 cal. by sleeving the barrel. SN 50266
Christian Minor Spencer was born in Manchester, Connecticut on
June 20, 1833. At age 11, he went to live with his maternal
grandfather, Josiah Hollister, a veteran of the Revolutionary War.
It was there that young Christian learned the rudiments of wood-
and metalworking. By the age of 14, Spencer was apprenticed to the
Mount Nebo Silk Manufacturing Co., located in South Manchester,
Connecticut. This firm was owned by the Cheney family, one of New
England's most enterprising and influential families. After a year,
he entered a second apprenticeship, this time with local machinist
Samuel Loomis.
In late 1850, Spencer returned to the employ of the Cheneys as a
machinist. During this period, he perfected several experimental
machine designs, and in the process, he developed what would be a
lifelong relationship with the Cheneys. At the advice of Frank
Cheney, Spencer worked as a toolmaker in Rochester, New York, then
as a machinist in the locomotive repair shops of the New York
Central Railroad. He also worked briefly for the N. P. Ames Company
of Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts, where he received his first
formal experience with the manufacture of firearms. His next stop
was at the factory of Samuel Colt, where he helped to design many
of the specialized machines used in the production of Colt
revolvers.
Christian renewed his employment with the Cheney family in 1854
when, at the age of 22, he became superintendent of his
benefactor's new silk ribbon manufactory in Hartford. During this
period, Spencer designed and patented a machine to attach labels to
spools, thus allowing one shop girl to do the work of three. The
Cheneys paid Spencer a $25 royalty on every machine he produced.
Although working 11 hour days six days per week, Spencer began to
experiment with an idea for a breech-loading repeating firearm. By
1859, with the encouragement of both his father and the Cheneys, he
had perfected a lever-action rolling block rifle design, and on
March 6, 1860, he was awarded a U.S. patent for his work. With
financial backing from his father, Ogden Spencer, a prosperous wool
merchant, Christian was able to secure the services of Luke
Wheelock, an experienced gunsmith, for the production of prototype
firearms. Spencer also befriended Richard S. Lawrence, then
superintendent of the Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company, and this
association most likely influenced certain aspects of Spencer's
design.
By the spring of 1861, civil war had come to America, and the
Cheney family entered into a contract with Spencer in which all
rights and patents for Spencer's rifle design would be assigned to
them. In return, Spencer would receive a royalty of $1 for every
rifle produced. This was later lowered to 50 cents for each
military arm produced. The Cheneys had long been friends of Gideon
Welles, Secretary of the Navy in Abraham Lincoln's administration,
and this gave them, and Spencer's rifle, access to government
officials in Washington. At this time, Spencer also contracted with
Connecticut ammunition makers Crittenden & Tibbals for the
manufacture of a .56 caliber rimfire metallic cartridge for use in
his rifle. In its final form, the Spencer rifle employed a
spring-loaded seven-shot tubular magazine which was located in the
buttstock, and a lever-action which, when operated, ejected a spent
cartridge and chambered a fresh one. Manual cocking of the hammer
then readied the rifle for firing.
The stage was now set for Spencer's rise to fame. Through the
patronage of Secretary Welles, Spencer's rifle was successfully
tested by the Navy, resulting in the purchase of 1,000 guns. Army
trials followed in the spring of 1862, and this resulted in the
sale of an additional 10,000 guns. In addition, President Abraham
Lincoln also took part in a demonstration of the Spencer, firing
seven shots at a target forty yards away. This demonstration took
place on the Mall, near the site of the Washington Monument, and
resulted in Lincoln's personal endorsement of the arm. Spencer now
had contracts but no manufacturing facilities. Once again, the
Cheney family would prove to be indispensable to Spencer, as
Charles Cheney rented a portion of a piano factory in Boston for
production of Spencer firearms.
After several delays, the first shipment of Spencer carbines was
delivered on December 31, 1862. Both Army and Navy placed
additional orders during the summer of 1863, and many other Spencer
arms were purchased privately. By the end of the war, more than
144,000 Spencer rifles and carbines had been manufactured; over
two-thirds were purchased by the U.S. government. To keep up with
demand, Spencer subcontracted some production to the Burnside Rifle
Co. of Providence, Rhode Island.
Spencer rifles and carbines met with high praise from those who
were equipped with them, and with respect from those who faced them
in battle. In its first combat test, Spencer-armed Union troops
under the command of Colonel John Wilder earned the nickname
"Lightning Brigade" when they defeated a numerically superior
Confederate force at the Battle of Hoover's Gap, Tennessee on June
24, 1863. One week later, Spencer rifles again saw action in the
hands of troopers of the 5th Michigan Cavalry Regiment of General
George Armstrong Custer's Brigade at the Battle of Gettysburg.
Wilder's troops were called on again at the Battle of Chickamauga
in September, 1863, when they fought to hold the Union center in
the face of determined attacks by General James Longstreet's
Confederates.
Spencer rifles and carbines also saw service with several other
Union infantry and cavalry regiments. Although the South lacked the
capacity to manufacture metallic cartridges used by the Spencer,
captured arms and ammunition saw service with troops under the
command of Colonel John Mosby, the famed "Gray Ghost of the
Confederacy," as well as with other units and
individuals.
The effectiveness of the Spencer was greatly increased by two other
inventions, the Blakeslee cartridge box, and the Stabler cut-off
device. The Blakeslee cartridge box was invented by Union
cavalryman Erastus Blakeslee and consisted of a leather-covered
wood box containing six to ten tubes, each of which held seven
Spencer cartridges. Troops equipped with these boxes could quickly
reload the gun that, in the words of one awed Confederate, could be
"loaded on Sunday and fired all week."
Later Spencers, beginning with the Model 1865, were equipped with a
cut-off mechanism invented by Edward Stabler which, when engaged,
prevented the breechblock from moving far enough to chamber a
cartridge from the buttstock magazine. This device permitted the
Spencer to be used as a single-shot arm, with a full magazine held
in reserve. Spencer carbines continued to serve on the frontier
after the Civil War, but the firm's prodigious wartime output
contributed to a large post-war surplus.
Declining sales forced the Spencer Repeating Rifle Co. into
insolvency, and in October, 1868, all of the company's assets were
sold to the Fogerty Rifle Co. of Boston. Within a year, Fogerty's
assets were in turn purchased by Oliver Winchester, and Christian
Spencer agreed to assign all future repeating rifle designs or
improvements to Winchester. Spencer later returned to the firearms
industry with the formation of the Spencer Arms Co., which
manufactured his design for the first practical pump-action
shotgun. This firm was later sold to noted arms dealer Francis
Bannerman. Christian Spencer died on January 14, 1922.