Original Item: Only One Available. Just purchased from the estate of a long time IMA customer, this was personally selected from the many Snider rifles that came to us as part of the Nepal Cache in 2005. Unlike almost all of the Sniders we received, this rifle is 100% all British manufacture, starting life in 1853 as a .577 caliber three band ENFIELD Percussion Rifle model of P-1853. The lock is plate stamped “CROWN” over V.R. and 1853 / ENFIELD, indicating manufacture at the Royal Small Arms factory at Enfield. There is also the correct CROWN / ARROW “lock viewer’s mark” on the lock plate as well. This was a military issued rifle, as indicated by the royal monogram. The barrel is marked STEEL on the left side, next to the CROWN / CROSSED SCEPTERS / P proof mark from Birmingham, where the snider conversion took place.
There is the correct II * * stamped on top of the breech, indicating it is the MkII** version of the breech. This was the last version before the “latch” was introduced, though it does have a small “button” at the bottom of the breech plug that grips the breech block. The block itself is marked B.S.A. Co., indicating the block was made by Birmingham Small Arms Company, where the conversion almost certainly took place.
The whole rifle is in just outstanding collector’s condition, with a lovely glow. The wood butt stock retains parts of its original stock cartouche, though it is unfortunately not legible. The barrel has standard three grove rifling and the bore shows clear lands and grooves, though the bore is somewhat dark from fouling and oxidation. Overall there isn’t really any rust pitting on the metal components, just a worn patina. The breech opens correctly, and is still held closed by the retaining button on the bottom. The block pulls back correctly when open to eject the cartridge, and the lock is fully functional.
An all British P-1853 BSA Co. Converted Snider Rifle originally made at ENFIELD. In lovely condition and ready to display!
Specifications:
Year of Manufacture: 1853 – Converted Later
Caliber: .58 inches
Ammunition Type: .577 Centerfire Cartridge
Barrel Length: 36.5 inches
Overall Length: 54 inches
Action: Side Action Lock
Feed System: Side Hinge Rotating Breech block
More on the P-1853 Rifle-Musket: The Enfield Pattern 1853 rifle-musket (also known as the Pattern 1853 Enfield, P53 Enfield, and Enfield rifle-musket) was a .577 calibre Minié-type muzzle-loading rifle-musket, used by the British Empire from 1853 to 1867, after which many Enfield 1853 rifle-muskets were converted to (and replaced in service by) the cartridge-loaded Snider-Enfield rifle.
The term “rifle-musket” originally referred to muskets with the smooth-bored barrels replaced with rifled barrels. The length of the barrels were unchanged, allowing the weapons to be fired by rank, since a long rifle was necessary to enable the muzzles of the second rank of soldiers to project beyond the faces of the men in front. The weapon would also be sufficiently long when fitted with a bayonet to be effective against cavalry. Such guns manufactured with rifled barrels, muzzle loading, single shot, and utilizing the same firing mechanism, also came to be called rifle-muskets.
The 39 in (99 cm) barrel had three grooves, with a 1:78 rifling twist, and was fastened to the stock with three metal bands, so that the rifle was often called a “three band” model.
History of the Snider rifle– Jacob Snider, an American from New York, developed this breech loading system for the P-1853 Enfield, the most prolific imported Percussion rifle in use by both the North and South during the U.S. Civil War. When the British Board of Ordnance appointed a Select Committee in 1864 the Snider system was swiftly adopted with the first breech loaders being issued in 1865 to British forces.
Improved in 1867 by the use of Colonel Boxer’s center fire brass bodied cartridge, the rifle was used very effectively in the Abyssinian Campaign of 1868. The system utilized a hinged breech block with an internal firing pin assembly that permitted the use of a self contained cartridge of lead bullet in cardboard, and, after 1867, brass casing. This highly efficient conversion system prolonged the active life of the P-1853 rifles up until 1871 when the Martini System was adopted. Snider rifles saw continued use throughout the Empire but were officially obsoleted by the late 1880s.
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