Aaron Newcomer -
  • Articles sur les Munitions
  • Articles sur les Armes
  • Livres et Documents
  • Cartouches à broche à vendre
  • Armes à broche à vendre
  • en_USEnglish
Products (0)
$0
Aaron Newcomer -
  • Articles sur les Munitions
  • Articles sur les Armes
  • Livres et Documents
  • Cartouches à broche à vendre
  • Armes à broche à vendre
Articles sur les Munitions
Articles sur les Armes
Livres et Documents
Cartouches à broche à vendre
Armes à broche à vendre
Livres

Civil War poster from 1863 showing prices of uniforms, garrison equipment, weapons and more!

22 novembre 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Aucun commentaire

This is a really unique poster detailing the price of each part of a firearm issued to men in the American Civil War. It measures 20 inches by 24 inches and was printed by the Adjutant General’s Office led by Lorenzo Thomas. It was likely provided to the regimental quartermasters in charge of accounting for ordnance stores.

There are 16 tables printed on this Civil War poster representing uniforms, garrison equipment, weapons and more. I think it likely served a couple purposes. The most obvious use was a quick reference guide to the prices of equipment to deduct from officer’s payrolls due to unaccountable losses. Most of these tables are also printed in the document, Instructions for Making Quarterly Returns of Ordnance and Ordnance Stores: As Prescribed by the General Regulations of the Army; Including Directions Respecting The Evidence Required In Settling The Ordnance Property Accounts Of Officers Leaving The Service. Prepared At The Ordnance Bureau, For The Use Of Officers Accountable For Such Property.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 4 min
Armes

Underhammer Pinfire Pistol by Joseph-Célestin Dumonthier

1 novembre 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Aucun commentaire
underhammer pinfire pistol made by the French gunsmith, Joseph-Célestin Dumonthier

This is a really early underhammer pinfire pistol made in 1849 by the French gunsmith, Joseph-Célestin Dumonthier who lived in Houdan, Seine-et-Oise, France. It follows his 2 July 1849 French patent.

Dumonthier patent

The whole barrel unscrews from the frame and allows you to load a single 12mm pinfire cartridge.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 1 min
Armes, Lefaucheux

Lefaucheux Model 1859 Carbine

26 octobre 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires
Lefaucheux Model 1859 Carbine

The Lefaucheux model 1859 carbine was a small carbine Eugène Lefaucheux made with hopes to gain military acceptance. It is a very simple design with few moving parts. It only weighs 4.5 pounds and has an overall length of 3 feet 4 inches.

There are multiple variations of this gun; some with a full metal frame, some with an automatic cartridge extractor, a percussion cap version, a double barrel version, pistols, and various bores.

This example is chambered for 12mm pinfire cartridges, has a manual extractor and a solid wood stock.

top of Lefaucheux model 1859

There are two levers on the gun. The one on the right is the cocking lever and also serves as the breechblock. When you raise it it opens the breech, allowing you to insert a new pinfire cartridge or remove a spent cartridge. It also cocks the extra-long hammer. The following video and image shows how this works.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 4 min
Cartouches

Eley Bros Factory Drawings for Pinfire Cartridges

4 octobre 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 4 commentaires

Here is a selection of factory drawings/blueprints for how Eley Bros made pinfire cartridges. These blueprints date to the early 1900s.

Eley 5mm pinfire cartridge drawing

First up is the 5mm pinfire cartridge drawing. There is a lot going on here! It lists the dimensions for the bullet, the pin, the percussion cap and the case. They also give all of the dimensions in imperial units though these cartridges were always sold by their metric designation, “5mm.”

The bullet is described of being made of 98% lead and 2% antimony. The antimony was an additive used to harden the alloy. It was a hollow bullet with an overall diameter of .207 inches, or 5.258 millimeters. It had an overall height of .300 inches or 7.62 millimeters. The bullet weight is 18 grains and the powder charge is listed as “about 1.5 grains.”

5mm Eley Pinfire Cartridges

This matches up closely with examples in my collection which have a bullet weight of 18.0 grains and a powder charge of 2 grains. The overall weight is 35.2 grains.

The brass case is listed to have a mixture of 70% copper and 30% zinc to make up the alloy they used. The case had an overall length of .450 inches or 11.43 millimeters. They give the exact specifications of where to put the hole for the brass pin and even what angle the pin should be placed in the cartridge to ensure the hammers get the best hit.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 4 min
Cartouches, Livres, Armes

The Patents for Pauly Guns and Cartridges by Plomdeur, Cessier, and Delebourse

2 septembre 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires
Charles Benoist Victor Delebourse Patent

There have been many articles written about Jean Samuel Pauly and his contribution to the history of firearms development. One excellent source recently looks in detail at the patents by Pauly, Roux, Picherau and Lefaucheux. You can read about it here:

Priestel dives deep into the modifications by Pauly and the successors to Pauly’s company, but there are a few other improvements to the Pauly system by other prominent gunmakers of the day that are not addressed in this publication. A couple of these were mentioned in a French gun magazine’s article in the 1970s, but other than the brief mention there, there is nothing I could find published that goes into detail on the following improvements to the Pauly gun and cartridges.

So I gathered the patents, transcribed them and will detail the improvements here!

Jacques-Joseph Plomdeur | 1825-03-31

Jacques-Joseph Plomdeur was a well known gunmaker who had a business at 25 rue des Fossés-Montmartre and later at 5 bis, rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière. He was best known for his improvements to primers and percussion caps which he held a few patents on. In the 1830s he took out many advertisements for his improvements to guns and primers such as the following:

Le Charivari, 10 septembre 1837
Le Charivari, 10 Sep 1837

On 31 Mar 1825, Plomdeur took out a French patent for 5 years for an improvement on Pauly guns.

There are two main areas that he addresses. First is how the hammer is connected to the plate, passing all the way through, which allowed for considerable fouling throughout the inside.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 22 min
Livres

Jean Samuel Pauly, Henri Roux, and Successors by Georg Priestel

31 août 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires

Note to visitors linked from Forgotten Weapons, and everyone else too:
Much of the information in Ian’s video came from this book, but its central argument that Pauly only produced fire piston type guns is incorrect. Pauly absolutely created and patented a percussion-firing system. I have recently acquired the complete set of French military reports and memos from his 1812 to 1814 trials, and they make this beyond dispute. The book also relies on faulty translations and misinterprets evidence. For example, the firearms shown on pages 24 and 25 are cited as fire piston examples, but I have examined images of their internal mechanisms and can confirm they are percussion arms.

After Pauly moved to the UK in 1814, he did patent and produce fire piston versions of his design, likely as a way to work around Forsyth’s overly broad patent on percussion ignition systems in Britain.

For those asking about access to the book, PDF copies are available in two places:

  1. In the Jean Samuel Pauly archives at the Lefaucheux Museum (Pauly’s company was later acquired by Lefaucheux), available to supporting members.
  2. In the International Ammunition Association’s Resource Center, also accessible to members.

For the most accurate and updated research on Pauly, follow this blog (sign up with your email to the right) and the Lefaucheux Museum. I will also be publishing a detailed monograph to accompany a forthcoming ASAC presentation and display.

This book is an important source examining the company of Jean Samuel Pauly and his successors. It collects and analyzes many of the earliest documents and patents surrounding this revolutionary step in firearms design, making it one of the few substantial modern works devoted to the subject.

However, readers should be aware that while the book is deeply detailed, many of its conclusions are now known to be incorrect. Chief among these is the author’s claim that Pauly only produced fire piston–type arms. Extensive archival material from Pauly’s 1811–1813 French military trials demonstrates that he in fact created and patented a percussion-firing system, and even some of the firearms illustrated in the book (such as those on pp. 24–25) are percussion rather than fire piston examples. The book also suffers from mistranslations and other interpretive errors, though it nonetheless remains valuable for the breadth of contemporary documentation it reproduces and its attempt to synthesize earlier scattered sources.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 6 min
Cartouches, Livres, Armes

The Pinfire Patents by James Erskine

29 août 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires

James Erskine, a gunmaker and inventor from Newton Stewart, Scotland had a prolific career inventing and patenting many improvements to guns and cartridge loading machines. His patented cartridge filler was universally accepted and used by all of the great British gunmakers of the day!

Erskine was born on September 12, 1812, in Penninghame, Wigtownshire, Scotland, the son of Mary Watson and Thomas Erskine. He married Elizabeth Sinclair on December 4, 1854, in his hometown. They had eight children over 21 years. He died on November 20, 1891, in Newton Stewart, Wigtownshire, Scotland, having lived a long life of 79 years.

During most of those 79 years Erskine was active learning and then working in the gun trade. The IGC Historical Database indicates that Erskine began his apprenticeship at 14 years old, working as a gun finisher for Williams & Powell, or their predecessor, Edward Patrick in Liverpool.

Sometime after 1841 and before the 1851 Scotland Census, Erskine moved to Newton Stewart and began working for himself as a gun maker.

He displayed two guns at the 1851 Great Exhibition and was awarded a bronze metal.

On July 20, 1859 he delivered the following provisional specification to the British patent office for an update to the Lefaucheux-style pinfire shotgun:

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 18 min
Livres

Description des Machines et Procédés spécifiés dans les Brevets D’Invention

7 août 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Aucun commentaire
Pauly Guns from Description des Machines et Procédés spécifiés dans les Brevets D’Invention

Description des Machines et Procédés spécifiés dans les Description des machines et procédés spécifiés dans les brevets d’invention, de perfectionnement et d’importation, dont la durée est expirée was the official printed record of the patents granted in France that were issued under the 1791 patent laws. These patents were not printed until after their expiration date of either 5, 10 or 15 years from when they were issued.

From 1791 until 1844 it was incredibly expensive to get a patent issued. The patent tax for 5 years was 300 francs, for 10 years it was 800 francs and for 15 years it was 1500 francs. At the time the average worker’s daily wage was 1.5 francs.

Flat Description des Machines et Procédés spécifiés dans les Brevets D’Invention

This feels like a very high quality book with thick linen rag pages, gilded pages and marbled inside covers. It even came with a bookmark!

But the content inside the document is what is really important. This is the official record of what the Conservatoire royal des arts et métiers (i.e. the patent office) believed the patent was about, looking back after it expired. This document is not always a full transcription of the patentee’s original document but rather detailed abstract that specifically describes the patent and heavily focuses on describing the drawings that accompanied it. It does quote specific sections sometimes though, Additionally, all of the drawing in the original patent may not always be reprinted here.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 3 min
Cartouches, Editor's choice, Armes

August G. Genez – A Practical Gunmaker

4 août 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 3 commentaires
A. G. Genez, Gunsmith Shop Closeup

August G. Genez was a French Gunsmith that began working in the gun-making industry at 13 years old in France. He died on June 17, 1897 and over the course of his career he had many successful ventures as well as challenging tragedies.

This article will take a look at A. G. Genez, the gunsmith in New York, New York, and follow his 50-year career in the gun industry. We will also take a look at his successors of his gun shop, Vincent Bissig and John P. Dannefelser.

When August Genez was 21 years old he immigrated to the United States from a port in Le Havre, France on a ship named Charles Thompson and arrived in New York, New York on April 10, 1854. The ship log of his emigration record states he was from Germany but his naturalization record, son’s wedding record, various ads of his, son’s various census records all state his birthplace was France.

A. G. Genez shops map

The Genez name first shows up in the 1856/1857 issue of Trow’s New York City Directory where Genez August is listed as a gunsmith at 221 William. The same year the Wilson’s business directory of New-York City list him under the Gunsmiths section with his business at 221 William.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 12 min
Livres

L’Ecole du Chasseur; an 1822 Hunter’s manual with an early drawing and extract about Pauly Guns by Henri Roux

28 juillet 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Aucun commentaire
L'Ecole du chasseur; an 1822 Hunter's manual

L’Ecole du chasseur is an early book with reviews and information on birding, fishing, and hunting. They devote around 60 pages to print an extract of Henri Roux’s publication, Fusils De Chasse, Et Principalement Des Fusils a Pistons De L’invention Pauly, Avec Quelques Observations Sur La Fabrication Des Armes a Feu, Sur La Chasse, Sur La Poudre Et Ses Effets, a book all about the benefits of the new Pauly rifle and pistol, a system which Henri Roux owned the patents and company for.

Fusil De Chasse by Henri Roux

Roux also created a detailed drawing which is referenced in both of these books throughout the text.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 1 min
Livres

Found in The Ironmonger – Autumn 1901 Issue

24 juillet 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires
The Ironmonger Universal Engineer & Metal Trades Advertiser Autumn 1901 Issue

As a reminder, The Ironmonger & Metal Trades Advertiser was a British trade journal whose purpose (according to the publisher) was “concerned with helping people to make a living.” It is full of articles and exposition reviews and trade news and advertisements related to Ironmongers, which would be similar to modern-day hardware stores. I have began a series of publishing some of the guns and ammunition related features and ads from these historic journals that have largely been lost to history and are not published anywhere else.

This post will focus on the contents in the July-September 1901 Issues. The August 31, 1901 weekly issue had a nice two-page section on Guns and Ammunition. I will transcribe these articles here!

A Top-lever Hammerless-gun.

Following a well-established custom, Robert Hughes & Son, of the Universal Firearms Works, Moland Street, Birmingham, have issued an abridged list of their productions illustrating the leading lines in sporting-guns which they are this season offering to the trade. The list embraces some two dozen weapons, ranging from a simple farmers’ gun listing at 4l. 4s., up to the highest class of Anson & Deeley ejecting hammerless-gun retailing for about 50l. One of the best selling lines is the No. 4,4640, illustrated in fig. 1. This is a top-lever hammerless-gun, with cross-bolt action, and either plain damascus or steel barrels.

A Top-lever Hammerless-gun

It is fitted with many modern improvements and is nicely finished in every detail. It retails at about 11l. Another popular line is the “Gentleman’s” gun, No. 4,456. This is a good-looking and well-finished weapon, with nicely-figured damascus barrels and figured stock, and it lists at 7l. to 8l. 10s.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 12 min
Livres

Found in The Ironmonger – Autumn 1896 Issue

19 juillet 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Un commentaire
The Ironmonger - Autumn 1896 Issue

The last issue in September of The Ironmonger and Metal Trades Advertiser was often the most important issue of the year. It was the biggest and contained the most ads. This issue each year also had this fancy colored cover.

Eley, Joyce, Kynoch trademarks

This September 26, 1896 issue of The Ironmonger lists Arms and Ammunition trade marks, brands or special names for the following companies:
Lane Bros., Ammunition for Air Guns
Hay, Merricks & Co., Limited, Gunpowder
F. Joyce & Co. Ltd., Manufacturers of Sporting Ammunition; Percussion Caps, Cartridges and Gun Wads
Eley Bros., Lim., Sporting, Military, and Revolver Cartridges, Percussion Caps and Gunwads
G. Kynoch & Co. Limited, Sporting and Military Ammunition
The King’s Norton Metal Co., Limited, Rolled Metals, Ammunition for Small Arms, Quick Firing and other Guns

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 8 min
Livres

The Ironmonger & Metal Trades Advertiser

par Aaron Newcomer 3 commentaires
The Ironmonger Trade Journals

The Ironmonger & Metal Trades Advertiser was the first trade newspaper. It was first published as Morgan’s Monthly Circular & Metal Trades Advertiser on May 31, 1859 and soon changed its name to The Ironmonger & Metal Trades Advertiser.

It began as a monthly journal and by 1878 it was switched to being published weekly, every Saturday. They also published the yearly volumes capturing the 52 weekly issues in 2-4 large volumes per year. I recently acquired a set of these yearly volumes that cover the years of 1879 – 1903.

Weekly issue of The Ironmonger

There is a wealth of information in these related to the hardware and metal trade across the United Kingdom. They had weekly stock performance, tabulated results on UK exports to the US, foreign news and intelligence, reviews of agricultural shows and other exhibitions, articles about guns and ammunition, listing of patents and trademarks applied for, information on liquidations and bankruptcies and advertisements; many many advertisements.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 2 min
Cartouches, Livres

.58 Schubarth Cartridge; and the Improved Breech-loading Rifle Article from The Scientific American, August 31, 1861

18 juillet 2020 par Aaron Newcomer 2 commentaires

We have examined this cartridge previously in our exploration of the relationship of pinfire cartridges and The United States. You can read about it here:

Other Uncommon American Pinfire Cartridges

The August, 31 1861 issue of The Scientific American reviewed this new cartridge and gun made by Casper D. Schubarth in detail. I found an original copy and transcribed it here to preserve for the future.

Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 4 min
Armes

Extremely High Grade 16g Pinfire Shotgun by Coirier à Clermont

14 juillet 2020 par Aaron Newcomer Un commentaire
16g Pinfire Shotgun by Coirier à Clermont

The story of Coirier à Clermont is a interweaved tale of partnerships and encounters that begins in 1848.

In 1848 a Frenchman named Francis Marquis founded a company that made carbines for cavalry. In French this is the term, harquebusier. He was known for making high quality guns and displayed some of his work at the Exposition Universelle of 1855 in Paris, the 1862 Great London Exposition and the 1867 Paris Universal Exposition.

Shortly after the London Exposition, La Chasse Illustrée, an illustrated journal dedicated to all things hunting, featured an article about some of the high grade guns presented at the exposition. They described Marquis’s gun as “remarkable” and “a real masterpiece.”

Rifle by Francis Marquis  illustrated in La Chasse Illustrée
Continue reading
TEMPS DE LECTURE: 2 min
Page 4 of 6« Premier...«3456»

My Other Projects

Lefaucheux Museum
A digital museum and research archive focused on Casimir Lefaucheux, early breech-loading firearms, pinfire cartridges, and 19th-century arms technology.

Eley Cartridges
A research project documenting the history, development, packaging, and collecting of Eley cartridges and historic ammunition.

Jean Samuel Pauly
An archive exploring the life, patents, inventions, and influence of Jean Samuel Pauly in the development of early self-contained cartridge firearms.

Document Transcribe
An AI platform for historical document transcription, handwritten record OCR, translation, and archival research.

ABONNEZ-VOUS AU BLOG PAR EMAIL

Entrez votre adresse e-mail pour vous abonner à ce blog et recevoir des notifications de nouveaux articles par e-mail.

Language

  • en_USEnglish
  • fr_FRFrançais

À PROPOS DE MOI

Bonjour, je m'appelle Aaron Newcomer. Je suis collectionneur et chercheur sur les systèmes d'armes à feu à chargement par la culasse du début du 19e siècle, avec un intérêt particulier pour les travaux de Jean Samuel Pauly et Casimir Lefaucheux. Je collectionne les cartouches et les documents liés à ces types d'armes à feu et je mène des recherches sur ces sujets, approfondissant ma compréhension et ma connaissance de ces armes historiques et leur place dans l'évolution de la technologie des armes à feu. Ma collection et mes recherches reflètent mon engagement à préserver et à comprendre l'histoire et les innovations techniques de ces systèmes d'armes à feu anciens.

Pour en savoir plus sur moi et où mes travaux ont été publiés.

SECTIONS DU SITE

  • Articles sur les Munitions
  • Articles sur les Armes
  • Livres et Documents
  • Cartouches à broche à vendre
  • Armes à broche à vendre

ARTICLES EN VEDETTE

Italian Military Pinfire Cartridges and Revolvers

Italian Military Pinfire Cartridges and Revolvers

Hundreds of Gévelot pinfire cartridges excavated at Civil War site in Rolla, Missouri

Hundreds of Gévelot pinfire cartridges excavated at Civil War site in Rolla, Missouri

Casimir Lefaucheux’s first pistol and the death of Pauly’s Cartridge System

Le premier pistolet de Casimir Lefaucheux et la fin du système de cartouches de Pauly

The Relationship Between the United States and Pinfire Cartridges

The Relationship Between the United States and Pinfire Cartridges

August G. Genez – A Practical Gunmaker

August G. Genez – A Practical Gunmaker

Recherche

Articles récents

  • Jenour’s “Brittle Charges”: The Ammunition Baked Like Bread
  • The Innovative Firearms of Joseph Alexandre Robert: Revolutionizing 19th Century Weaponry
  • The Davoust Shot Concentrator: A French Answer to Unruly Patterns (1855–1859)
  • Wohlgemuth’s Break-Action Musket Conversion and Rifled Barrel Insert System
  • From Collector to Founder: How My Passion for Historical Documents Led to an AI Startup

Information

  • CONDITIONS GÉNÉRALES D'UTILISATION
  • POLITIQUE DE CONFIDENTIALITÉ
  • POLITIQUE D'EXPÉDITION ET DE LIVRAISON
  • POLITIQUE DE REMBOURSEMENT ET DE RETOUR
  • NOUS CONTACTER

Social

  • Mastodon
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • CasimirLefaucheux.com

ARTICLES RÉCENTS

Jenour’s “Brittle Charges”: The Ammunition Baked Like Bread

Jenour’s “Brittle Charges”: The Ammunition Baked Like Bread

14 janvier 2026
The Innovative Firearms of Joseph Alexandre Robert: Revolutionizing 19th Century Weaponry

The Innovative Firearms of Joseph Alexandre Robert: Revolutionizing 19th Century Weaponry

16 novembre 2025

Categories

  • Cartouches
  • Livres
  • CHOIX DE L'ÉDITEUR
  • Armes
  • Le Musée Lefaucheux
  • Lefaucheux
  • Technologie
  • États-Unis

©Tous droits réservés. AaronNewcomer.com