The American republic was born in war. While statesmen asserted the independence of the United States in an eloquent declaration, tens of thousands of British soldiers and sailors converged on New York to subdue the rebellion by force.
Revolutionaries armed with muskets and swords had to wage an eight-year war to free the new nation from British rule and ensure that the promise of independence would be fulfilled. Supplying its troops with the weapons required to win the Revolutionary War was a critical, complex and ever-present issue for the new American nation. When the war began in , there were few factories in America capable of producing firearms, swords and other weapons—let alone in the quantities necessary to sustain an army for several years.
At the height of the war, fifty thousand men served in the Continental Army, with another thirty thousand state and militia troops fighting for the American cause. To arm these soldiers against the well-supplied British regulars, American officials gathered weapons from an array of sources on two continents.
Patriots had begun to amass caches of weapons as tensions grew in the months leading up to the Battles of Lexington and Concord in , seizing British arms from royal storehouses, provincial magazines and supply ships.
At the beginning of the Revolution, the army relied on soldiers to bring weapons from home, including hunting guns, militia arms and outdated martial weapons from the French and Indian War.
American soldiers also carried weapons captured from the enemy in the field and reissued to Continental and state troops. A growing number of American manufacturers produced weapons on government contracts, as the domestic arms industry expanded to try to meet the demand, but they could not sustain the American troops through a long conflict.
Success on the battlefield ultimately depended on the hundreds of thousands of arms supplied by France and Spain. Shipments of arms and ammunition from France began arriving in and continued for the rest of the war. The exhibition also features two important American-made muskets produced at manufactories in and around Fredericksburg, Virginia, on loan from the Fredericksburg Area Museum, and several arms from the collection of James L. Kochan, including an extremely rare French Model rampart musket that was transported to America between and and modified at the arsenal in Springfield, Massachusetts, for use by Continental troops.
British Pattern Short Land musket ca. The Society of the Cincinnati, Museum purchase with a gift from Dr. Jennifer London, The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Maj. The Society of the Cincinnati, Gift of Dr. More than most later wars, the warfare of the Revolutionary War happened within a hundred yards of each other and often resulted in deadly hand to hand combat. Rev War Article. Small Arms of the Revolution.
By Mark Maloy. Museum of Fine Arts Boston. The soldier to the far left is a Black infantryman of the 1st Rhode Island Regiment. Related Articles. View All Related Resources. Related Battles.
Brandywine Battle Facts. Estimated Casualties. American 1, View Full Battle Overview. Great Bridge Battle Facts. American 1. Monmouth Battle Facts. American Lexington and Concord Battle Facts. Saratoga Battle Facts. Cowpens Battle Facts. Camden Battle Facts. The enemy is over there; a blind man could use this, just point towards the noise. And the object was to continue to advance upon the enemy, until it was time to be able to attach the bayonets.
In the eighteenth century, battles ended in hand-to-hand combat. So, the bayonet, as you can see, basically turns the musket into a spear. If you could just imagine being stabbed with that, or your brains dashed out with the other end, it gets pretty nasty. Picture in your mind all the horses and tents and fires.
Governor Tryon had about a thousand men in his militia, and he brought eight cannons, similar to our three-pound field piece down there. These were all amateurs; there were no professional soldiers here. But nearby Guilford Courthouse, National Military Park, about sixteen miles from here, that was said to be some of the most savage hand-to-hand combat of the entire American Revolution, so you may want to go over there someday.
If you drop it, there are no delicate sights to knock out of alignment, like a rifle. A rifle is made to hit a specific target. That spin makes the bullet fly straight. A rifle also has sights, one in the front, one in the back. It takes skill to hit something with a rifle.
I can load this thing literally this quickly; wham, bam. Somebody say yeah. It takes two or three minutes to load a flintlock rifle, as opposed to, say, eight seconds for a musket. So the rifle was for hunting, the musket was for fighting. You shoot at the officer, you shoot at the medic. So the British got pretty mad about this. They put out the word that any man caught with a rifle would be hung.
You see that flint right there?
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