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cwbuff
04-16-2015, 03:28
Is there a good reference that documents the known serial numbers of US M1873 carbines issued to the 7th Cavalry? From what I have seen, it appears to be an area of active research.

Dick Hosmer
04-16-2015, 05:45
Not in one place. I've been compiling numbers from various sources for nearly 50 years, and have recorded about 1200 early carbines. Of those, about 70 have some degree (from ironclad to very tenuous) of provenance to the 7th Cav. All of the numbers I have will be published in the book I am finishing up now - hopefully out this year, but more likely next.

Was that a rhetorical question, or did you have a specific number in mind? About the best I can do at the present time is tell you whether it is in a "hot" area, or way out in left field. Known 7th guns run from 12221 to 43617.

cwbuff
04-17-2015, 08:40
I will be interested in buying your book when it comes out. I have an early M1873 carbine. I like to research the items in my collection - it gives them more meaning to me from both a historical and technical perspective. I have done some research on Wilder Brigade Spencer rifles. From that research it became clear that the guns were not crated, shipped and issued in serial number order. I assume the M1873 carbines were done in a similar manner. Clearly our ancestors did not have any consideration for future collectors - but they sure did make a good sport out of trying to figure it all out.

Here are some pics of my M1873 carbine:

cwbuff
04-17-2015, 08:43
...and some additional pics:
3054730548305493055030551.

Dick Hosmer
04-17-2015, 09:45
Thanks for sharing the pics - a nice looking gun, overall. It was a new number to me, falling between previously recorded carbines 33729 and 33742.

FWIW, 32811, 33759 and 34874 were surveyed out of the 7th, at Ft. Keogh in April of 1878. Were they with Reno/Benteen et al, at LBH? No one knows - that is what I mean by tenuous.

You are entirely correct in your assumption regarding non-linear shipping, issue, etc.

raymeketa
04-17-2015, 09:52
Many years ago I was a collector of Springfield Carbines and a Custer Buff. I was very serious about both. The quest to tie particular carbines to the LBH was just as intriguing then as it is now. The many searches (by me and by others) seldom resulted in anything positive. With today's Internet it should be a little easier and if anyone has been able to put together a list of possibles, it is Mr. Hosmer. It almost makes me wish I was still into both the Carbines and LBH. Almost. :icon_rolleyes:

Ray

cwbuff
04-17-2015, 11:08
Thanks for the information. Is the "Custer era" considered before SN 50,000 or 43,700 or some other SN?

Dick Hosmer
04-17-2015, 11:50
SA made just over 20,000 "first model" "long wrist" carbines. ALL of them were made well before LBH, so any given specimen is theoretically possible to have been there. All such carbines were also under 50,000 (more like 48,000) - and no more were made until the improved M1877 model at around 75,000. I'm not sure how one would define "Custer era" - obviously, I suppose, it would center on 1876.

Then, one must consider that there were 28,000 other arms made during the same period - mostly rifles, but a few cadets as well. The models did not run in solid blocks though trends and clumps are fairly obvious. There are three blocks of early carbines. None from the first block are known to have made it to LBH, at least on the US side.

As noted earlier, in gleaning from a great many sources, about 70 carbine numbers are associated with the 7th at LBH. In most cases the number is known but the whereabouts of the gun (or even if it exists - most likely do not) is not known. There are a handful of forensically ID'd specimens for whom their owners have paid fantastic sums of money, but the ID process used has its' detractors, and some of the stories would appear to have issues and or leaps of faith. It's not an exact science, but it makes for a grand game, all the same.

A number of people "used" to collect TDs but later changed to something else - that is where I differ; my focus has never shifted. This has gotten far too long - hopefully you get the basic picture.

cwbuff
04-17-2015, 11:54
Will this information be documented in your book?

Dick Hosmer
04-17-2015, 12:52
I have not yet decided whether to present the "First Model Carbines" as a chapter, or an appendix.

The book was intended to present only the rare, limited production arms omitted from North Cape's basic book, and that model fits neither classification. My only reason for including it at all was to disseminate the 50 years of collected serial numbers. If it appears as a chapter, there will be at least three or four pages of text, plus the list of 1200+ numbers. Those with association to the 7th Cav. will be marked "7th".

For reasons (mostly space - I'm already in trouble) that I do not wish to go into at this time, none of the individual numbers will have any associated "documentation".

With no intent to be flippant, this will be a soft-cover "take to the shows" pocket reference, not Funk & Wagnall's.

jjrothWA
06-06-2015, 06:47
Locate a "Dixie gun Works catalog there is a listing of SN's. It spans three different SN ranges that are thoght to been assigned to the 7th.

Art
06-06-2015, 07:15
Interesting story on this. An old boy was writing in a gun magazine, I've forgotten which one and didn't keep it, regarding an early Carbine he had. He learned that the LBH people had done a lot of archeology on the site and had a catalog of spent cases recovered from the battle field. On a whim he sent a fired case from his carbine, they compared it to their catalogue of cases from the battlefield and came up with a match! I suppose that means that his old carbine went from just really valuable to incredibly valuable.

Art
06-06-2015, 07:57
Here is an article about the carbine in my above post.

http://weaponsman.com/?p=10970

Dick Hosmer
06-07-2015, 07:15
I was really wondering just which carbine this was going to be!

There are some problems with that gun (which was first written up in Man-At-Arms magazine, Oct. 2011) some trivial, some not so much. In no particular order:

(1) As presented, it is not in original configuration. The stock has been changed, which means it either stayed with the Army, or was put together later.

(2) The breechblock (CRITICAL to the forensic ID process) shows a definite difference in color and patina, even though it is of correct type.

(3) The serial number is FAR removed from any other carbines (ALL "first model" carbines were produced well before the battle).

(4) I was interested enough at the time to run down Dr. Scott and we corresponded about the arm, to no satisfactory conclusion I might add. He is unquestionably THE man to go to about the archeology of the site, and the forensic testing process, but I was surprised (no, amazed) to discover that he is only marginally knowlegeable about the finer nuances of early trapdoor features and was unable to corroborate that the gun as presented to him was correct.

(5) The comparative testing of cartridge cases is NOT an exact science, for a number of reasons.

(6) The batch of cases which wound up being "associated" with this carbine's breechblock were found in an "odd" location which, if I'm remembering correctly, does not tie well with the battle narrative.

In my opinion, this arm could be the poster child for the whole "Custer Carbine Carousel", perfectly illustrating the pitfalls of blending artifacts from a remote time with happenstance, wishful thinking, etc.

Art
06-07-2015, 11:18
All good except - tool mark evidence is definitive in court, in fact as definitive, from the legal standpoint, as fingerprints or DNA (I actually took an FBI course that include tool mark evidence which, with firearms includes rifling impressions on bullets as well as those made on the case. A lot of people have been convicted due to tool mark evidence found on cartridge cases, especially shotgun cases. Firearms are altered to indicate that projectiles and cases are not tied to a particular weapon but not that they are. In other words changing the tool marks on a weapon is always done to deceive folks into believing that the marks on projectiles and cases did not come from a suspect or questioned firearm, not the reverse.

Now the evidence doesn't prove the weapon was fired at the battle, only that cartridge cases found on the battlefield can be tied to the breech block of that carbine.

You are correct in your conclusion about the "Custer Carbine Carousel," in my opinion anyhow.

5MadFarmers
06-07-2015, 11:56
All good except - tool mark evidence is definitive in court, in fact as definitive, from the legal standpoint, as fingerprints or DNA (I actually took an FBI course that include tool mark evidence which, with firearms includes rifling impressions on bullets as well as those made on the case.

Regardless of what they taught you in that class, that isn't the case. Either that or the presentation was flawed. Biometric information and tool marks are not the same.

If they have my biometric information that only ties back to one person and isn't alterable. Tool marks, on the other hand, are. Point: I shoot somebody with an M-1911. I then change the barrel and sell that barrel at a gunshow. Somebody buys it and is pinched during a robbery. The tool marks taken from that person's gun match the murder round but it's obvious to us that they, and that gun, didn't do it. They produce a receipt for the barrel and it's post-murder. So much for your tool marks being the same as biometric information. I can't lend or sell my fingers or DNA in a useful fashion. Depending on the part of the tool I very well can. A test of my M-1911, with the replacement barrel, won't match the bullet recovered from the murder. "That gun wasn't used in that murder." Really? So much for tool marks being the same as DNA. In this case that's important.[1]


Now the evidence doesn't prove the weapon was fired at the battle, only that cartridge cases found on the battlefield can be tied to the breech block of that carbine.

This is also untrue. This is where the rubber hits the road. A "breechblock" typically doesn't leave marks on the cartridge - the firing pin does. If it can be established that the gun isn't "as it would be expected" during the battle, and that stock alone qualifies, I'd be willing to testify, as an expert witness no less, that US military arms were turned in by units and typically overhauled. Everybody knows this. So now you get to attempt to prove that the firing pin was retained in that breech block with that gun after it quite probably received a once over. Or that the gun avoided the normal course of issue, turn-in, clean and repair, issue, rinse and repeat. Good luck proving it was or wasn't. At this point it's considered opinion only.

Tool marks aren't as definitive as biometric. Tools can be changed. Tool mark evidence is "preponderance of evidence" instead of what DNA gives: scientific proof.


[1] "But the barrel itself is the tool!" A barrel isn't a firing pin and I'm not even going to bother debating that until you produce firing pin impressions from a wide sample of 1873 carbines with a double blind study showing that somebody can match that firing pin to that cartridge.

5MadFarmers
06-07-2015, 12:48
Art, I'm going to pile on. Mind you I have a lot of respect for you and your career but you're presenting one side so I'm going to present the other.

"Science" requires something very fixed and rigid. "This happens. Every time it happens." Gravity, as an example. Every time you drop a bowling ball, anywhere on the face of the earth, it "falls" to earth. Doesn't matter who does it. Yes, wiring it up will prevent that but that's more science. Math is very science based. In fact one could say that science is really math in so many ways. 3+4=7. Everyone doing that problem will get that result. Science. Generally established when the "proof" can be done by anyone and the result is always the same.

The "arts" or "humanities" are the opposite. It's all consensus based. Ergo, not science. "Choosy mothers choose Jiff." That's not science. "Most historians agree that the German offensive against the Russians failed." While some may think that's science it clearly isn't. Perhaps losing a war was needed to lose the Nazi party and solve the historic "Greater" versus "Lesser" German land problem (should all "Germans" be part of Germany? If so hello Austria). Consensus. A majority of people familiar with it agree. Einstein was told that a lot of scientists tried to disprove something he did and his answer was: "if I was wrong it'd only take one." Science works that way.

So "science" versus "not science."

If "science" was what courts were after they'd not have a judge, lawyers, the jury, etc. So one doesn't really "prove" anything in the "science" sense - one "convinces" the Jury. Consensus. Thus not science. If it was science there wouldn't be a Jury - just a scientist or two.

So courts are in the realm of the "arts" and not "science." Lawyers rarely have math degrees as the two, science and the arts, tend to be where people are typically good at one and not the other. No, that's not a science observation but I think we can get consensus on that....

On one had is the "prosecution" and the other the "defense." The prosecution side is generally trying to convince the Jury that somebody did something. The more "evidence" the produce the more likely they'll get Jury consensus. The defense, obviously enough, is doing the opposite. This is where a claim that "tool marks" are the same as biometrics is founded. That's not science. That's also the Law Enforcement side's view. Why? Because they're generally on the same side as the prosecution. So they try to come up with ways to convince people that non-science is science. Dogs sniffing out stuff is a pretty egregious example. A dog can, and may, alert on a nice juicy steak. Nobody has managed to figure out how to get the dog to tell you what exactly it's interested in. Blind studies don't indicate that dogs alert like the police would like you to believe.

So the law enforcement side is generally trying to get people to believe that non-science is science. "But the cops are interested in a fair trial! Not just winning!" If you believe that I have a slightly used bridge in New York I'm looking to off-load. Cheap.

Tool marks. Barrel markings are a good example. The law enforcement side is going to try to convince you that's science. It isn't. Defense is going to insist on a good sample of items and multiple "experts" if they know what they're doing. Find 100 similar guns. Fire bullets. Dump them into a pail. Have three "experts" pick out one. As Einstein said, "if I was wrong it would only take one to prove it." This is why they have countering expert witnesses. Removes non-science from the realm of science. Make them establish everything.

Tool marks aren't science. Biometrics are. Give my DNA to any DNA lab. They can run it against billions of samples and every one of them will point to me. Take a bullet and have people review it under a microscope. At that point it's interpretation of the marks. "Art appreciation" if you will. That isn't science. Pour a million bullets in there, all fired from various examples of the same type of gun, and see if everyone points to the same barrel. I'd be suspicious.

So law enforcement attempts to convince people that non-science is science. Goes with the territory. Like sniffing dogs.

Dick Hosmer
06-07-2015, 01:53
One must bear in mind that the comparison in this instance is between item(s) buried in the earth, or exposed to the elements, for well over 100 years and - at least in some cases - relatively modern ammunition. The originals had soft copper alloy cases with concealed internal primers, whereas modern ammo uses an exposed primer housed in the base of a much sturdier brass case. I believe that machining marks could show on the soft rounds that might not show on the new - so - the originality of the breechblock IS also of interest/concern.

I'd guess that the ignition (actually an explosion) of BP in a soft case would, by itself, produce a slightly different mark than that of a smokeless cartridge with a separate, hard, primer. The only "fair" comparison would be to use period cartridges. This may have been done; I am ignorant of those details. I am sure that modern forensics comparison between rounds fired only weeks or months apart would produce better results - but - 5MF's points about swapping parts remain absolutely valid.

I'd much rather have an iffy match on an impeccable gun, than an almost TOO good one (as some of the details come back to me) on a fairly hinky gun, which is what we seem to have here.

45govt
06-07-2015, 02:02
"A barrel isn't a firing pin and I'm not even going to bother debating that until you produce firing pin impressions from a wide sample of 1873 carbines with a double blind study showing that somebody can match that firing pin to that cartridge. "

I have always been skeptical about this "forensic" matching when I read the book Battle at The K-H Butte by Ludwig and Stute where the cartridge cases could not be matched as they were too corroded, in an arid environment as compared to Montana a more wet environment where you would expect even more corrosion.

Also I have heard the stories about the park superintendents, (Luce?) spreading bullets and cases around for the tourists to find.

I don't think I would buy any supposed artifact from the battle, even if I had the money.

Dick Hosmer
06-07-2015, 02:56
I do not disagree with any of post #19, above. The whole thing is a very slippery slope.

Tom Trevor
06-07-2015, 04:57
Just a thought. I have so few. The carbine was sold after the article was published for quite a lot of money. Now a friends wifes father, he is gone now, was a wheel at MGM and he was a collector of Springfield arms and found the studio had a large supply of 45-70 Benet rounds they pulled the bullets from and used as blanks. He obtained a large group of them and found most would fire. The owner of the carbine is a major collector of Custer items and I believe knows a number of battlefield personnel. Just suppose for a minute the Benet round were fired in the carbine in question then placed in tight groups where they can be found buried by the road? Seems odd that the cases were so tightly clustered in one place as anyone firing a Springfield knows they fly several feet behind you when ejected. Was he firing a one lone Indian standing still one hundred yards away and not moving so the cases landed in a neat pile? As I said just a thought not anything more.

Dick Hosmer
06-07-2015, 06:02
Funny - you and I think alike. Actually, it isn't - we've both been at this a long time. I cannot put my finger on it but something smells about that whole thing.

45govt
06-07-2015, 07:53
Just a thought. I have so few. The carbine was sold after the article was published for quite a lot of money. Now a friends wifes father, he is gone now, was a wheel at MGM and he was a collector of Springfield arms and found the studio had a large supply of 45-70 Benet rounds they pulled the bullets from and used as blanks. He obtained a large group of them and found most would fire. The owner of the carbine is a major collector of Custer items and I believe knows a number of battlefield personnel. Just suppose for a minute the Benet round were fired in the carbine in question then placed in tight groups where they can be found buried by the road? Seems odd that the cases were so tightly clustered in one place as anyone firing a Springfield knows they fly several feet behind you when ejected. Was he firing a one lone Indian standing still one hundred yards away and not moving so the cases landed in a neat pile? As I said just a thought not anything more.

You can just picture the guy walking along with some park personnel and going "oh my, look here what I found a bunch of cases that must have been used in the battle, lets check them against this old carbine I have"

:eusa_liar:

DRAGONFLYDF
06-07-2015, 08:25
Dick,
Your welcome to include my 1873 Carbine in your book.
http://www.jouster.com/forums/showthread.php?37610-SRS-please-1873-Springfield-Carbine&highlight=1873+carbine

Dick Hosmer
06-07-2015, 09:55
Have it, thanks. That looks like one of the scarce thick-wrist-but-no-trap stocks.

cwbuff
06-08-2015, 06:04
Great discussion! Clearly the forensic evidence of matching cases to carbines has been brought into question. If I understand correctly, having a carbine "tested" to see if there is a match to cases known to have been at the LBH costs about $10K. It makes me wonder how their business plans influences the "forensics" they produce.

Dick Hosmer
06-08-2015, 07:36
Quick disclaimer - I do not doubt that such testing can produce good results in some cases, but it is not infallible - especially when subject to the number of potential variables, and emotions, as are in play here.