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A Man of Wealth and Taste
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Out there somewhere beyond the doors of perception
Posts: 51,063
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff Higgins
From what I remember, Custer was a day or two ahead of the artillery and gatlings. He was, essentially, showboating. Seizing an opportunity for glory against what he believed to be an ill-disciplined, outnumbered, under equiped opponent. He was going to "take the initiative" and neatly rout them all on his own. If he had waited a day or two, the outcome could have been far different. But he would have had to have shared the glory. He wasn't that kind of guy.
By the way, he had his own .50 caliber, a .50-70 Remington Rolling Block that he used for hunting. Neither his Rolling Block, nor the Trapdoors present at the fight, were "Big 50's". The .50-70 was on a 1.75" case, where the real "Big 50" was on a 2.5" case. It held substantially more powder and fired a good deal heavier bullet. Neither the Trapdoor nor the Rolling Block will accept this long of a cartridge. This was the caliber Billy Dixon used for his famous shot at Adobe Walls, Texas, with a borrowed '74 Sharps.
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For once Jeffy you are off the mark with this one. while you are right about the 50/90 being the "Big 50"...you are wrong about the nomenclature of the literature about the Battle....The term that is used about the Springfield 50/70 is the "BIg Springfield" or "Big 50 Springfield"
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"Some Observer"
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03-29-2010, 12:00 PM
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