Winchester rifle
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The Winchester rifle was "the gun that won the west", manufactured by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company that was used widely in the United States during the latter half of the 19th century.
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[edit] Characteristics
The original Winchester rifle was famous for its rugged construction and lever-action breech mechanism that allowed the rifleman to fire a number of shots before having to reload: hence the term, "repeating rifle". See List of rifle cartridges for descriptions of various cartridges.
The first model, the Model 1866, was nicknamed Yellow Boy because of its brass receiver. The Model 1873 was Winchester's next design. The Model 73 was much more popular than the 66 because of the steel frame which allowed it to take the newly designed and more potent centerfire .44 WCF (.44-40) cartridge. The 1873 is often referred to as The Gun That Won The West.
The 1866 was only available in Henry's .44 rimfire cartridge at first, and the more modern centerfire cartridges were added to the production line later. The Model 73 was available .44 WCF, .38 WCF (.38-40), and .32 WCF (.32-20) calibers, most of which were also available in Colt, Remington and other revolvers. WCF denotes "Winchester Center Fire," as opposed to the earlier rimfire cartridges. Having a common centerfire cartridge used in both revolvers and rifles allowed the owner to carry two firearms, both using the same ammunition. The original Model 73 was never offered in the military standard .45 Colt cartridge; only modern reproductions are offered in that caliber.
Winchester continued to dominate the American rifle market with the introduction of the Model 1876, 1886, Model 1892 and Model 1894. The '76 was a heavier-framed rifle than the '66 or '73, and was the first to be chambered for full-powered centerfire rifle cartridges, as opposed to rimfire cartridges or handgun-sized centerfire rounds. It was introduced to celebrate the American Centennial, and earned a reputation as a durable and powerful hunting rifle. The Canadian Mounties also used the '76 as a standard long arm for many years. The Model 1886 continued the trend towards chambering heavier rounds, and was even stronger than the '76. In many respects the '86 was a true American express rifle. Theodore Roosevelt used the rifle during his first hunting expeditions in the West and praised it. The '86 could be chambered in the most powerful black powder cartridges of the day, including the massive .45-70.
Winchester returned to its roots with the Model 1892, which, like the first leverguns, was primarily chambered for lower-pressure, smaller, handgun rounds. The Model '92, however, incorporates a much stronger action than the leverguns of the 1860s and 1870s. Millions of '92s have been made, and although Winchester phased them out several decades ago, they are still being made under the Puma label by an Italian arms maker. In its modern form, the '92s action is strong enough to chamber ultra-high pressure handgun rounds, such as the .454 Casull.
The 1892 was designed as a replacement for the 1873 by a young John Moses Browning. Browning went on to dominate the Winchester design team during the revolutionary period of the 1890s and early 1900s, when smokeless powder forced all arms makers to go back to the drawing board and rethink every aspect of their firearms. Thanks to Browning's genius, Winchester was able to stay on top of the market during this explosive period. The company was the first to develop a rifle and cartridge for the new powder, the Winchester 1894. Though delays prevented the .30-30 or .30 WCF round from appearing on the shelves until 1895, it remained the first commercially available smokeless powder round for the North American consumer market. Though initially it was too expensive for most shooters to afford, the '94 ultimately became Winchester's most popular rifle of all time, selling many millions all across North America.
While earlier rifles and shotguns actually "won the West," the majority of lever action rifles seen in classic Hollywood Westerns are Winchester '92s and '94s, including the '92 carbine (chambered in .32-40[1]), which John Wayne famously carried around through dozens of films set in periods from the 1830s to the 1880s.
Winchester rifles remained the most popular in the US through WWI and the interwar period. However, European advances in the development of bolt action rifles threw a long shadow. These new rifles could chamber pointed "Spitzer" bullets, which no lever action with a tube magazine ever could. They could also cope with more pressure, and consequently they could chamber more potent rounds that would shoot flatter than a traditional lever action rifle. On top of this, bolt actions as developed by Mauser and other European concerns had front locking lugs which stabilized the cartridge head very well, and allowed for phenomenal accuracy.
In response to the increasing competition from these bolt-action rifles, Winchester introduced the Winchester Model 70 in 1936. This was not Winchester's first bolt action rifle, but it was by far their most successful. It was based on a modified Mauser '98 design, but with modifications and popular North American chamberings which made it more appealing to American hunters than European imports or sport-modified military rifles.
Winchester saw a management change in the early 1960s which led to an extensive and extremely controversial redesign of their firearms in 1964. This is regarded by many as the year the "real" Winchester ceased to be, and consequently "pre '64" rifles command higher prices than those made afterwards. Winchester itself went on to have a troubled future as competition from US and abroad began to decrease its sales. In the 1970s, the company was split into parts and sold off. The name "Winchester" remained with the ammunition making side of the company, and this branch at least continues to be profitable. The arms making side and New Haven facilities went to U.S. Repeating Arms, which struggled to keep the company going under a variety of owners and management teams. It finally announced plans to close the New Haven facility in 2006.
Marlin Firearms, also of New Haven, labored for a century as an underdog levergun maker to Winchester's number one. However, in the 1980s and 1990s, the current incarnation of Marlin finally began to outpace its old rival. It is currently the dominant seller of lever action rifles in North America. Its use of side ejection allows for flat-topped firearms, thereby making the mounting of scopes far easier than for traditional Winchesters. This helped Marlin capture more market share as American shooters came to rely more and more on optics. Marlins are also larger and stronger than most of the Winchester line, allowing them to take advantage of revolutionary new magnum-level versions of such cartridges as the .45-70.
[edit] Predecessors
The idea of a repeating rifle had been the subject of many inventions since the use of firearms began, but few of these had proven to be practical, mainly because the modern cartridge, which made repeating arms practical, had not yet been developed.
Repeating revolvers were popular in the mid 19th century. One of these revolving pistols, the Colt, was very successful, and a rifle version was produced, but it was not widely popular. The more successful Spencer rifles and carbines of the American Civil War were a notable step forward, but were not completely satisfactory in various respects.
The ancestor of the Winchester rifles was the Volcanic rifle of Horace Smith and Daniel B. Wesson. It was originally manufactured by the Volcanic Repeating Arms Company, which was later reorganized into the New Haven Arms Company, its largest stockholder being Oliver Winchester.
The Volcanic rifle used a form of "caseless" ammunition and had only limited success. Wesson had also designed an early form of rimfire cartridge which was subsequently perfected by Benjamin Tyler Henry. Henry also supervised the redesign of the rifle to use the new ammunition, retaining only the general form of the breech mechanism and the tubular magazine. This became the Henry rifle of 1860, which was manufactured by the New Haven Arms Company and was used in considerable numbers by certain Union Army units in the Civil War.
[edit] Development
After the war Oliver Winchester continued to exercise control of the company, renaming it the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, and had the basic design of the Henry rifle completely modified and improved to become the first Winchester rifle, the Model 1866, which fired centerfire cartridges and had an improved magazine and, for the first time, a wooden forearm.
From 1883, John Browning worked in partnership with the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, and designed a series of repeating rifles and shotguns, most notably the Winchester Model 1887 and Model 1897 shotguns and the lever-action Model 1886, Model 1892, Model 1894 and Model 1895 rifles, all of which are still in production today.
[edit] Reasons for Plant closure
There are a few reasons for the closure of the plant. The only two that I can think of that have any important significance are the lobbing for gun control and the strikes in the 70’s that plummet sales.
Since the coming of the Brady Bill, Million Mom March and Americans for Gun Safety Foundation, they lobby congressional representatives and create ideas that Americans are not responsible enough to have guns. The gun control people think that Americans do not need guns.[1,3] They want to make it impossible for people to have a gun. They are throwing money around to get lawmakers to create laws that make it illegal to have handguns. This is why they are for gun control.
The strikes in the 1970’s had to do with the layoffs in the defense department and the recession.[2] The steel workers were fighting for jobs and money. The factory was never able to recover from the blow that lack of workers and slow degeneration of sales to consumer has these are the reason for closing the New Haven branch. "U.S. Repeating Arms FAQ
[edit] Trivia
- A sawed-off 1892 Winchester Rifle is Zoe's (Firefly) weapon of choice. Creator, Joss Whedon calls this his "favorite gun of all times".
- Steve McQueen's character, Josh Randall, in the television series Wanted: Dead or Alive also used the 1892 rifle, nick-named the "Mare's Leg."
- The Winchester Rifle is the rifle used by Shaun in the film Shaun of the Dead to defend the Winchester Pub from a zombie invasion.
- The sound effect for Indiana Jones' revolver is actually a Winchester Rifle being fired.
- Father Grigori in the popular game Half-Life 2 uses a Winchester Rifle to kill off the zombies that have infested his town.
- Sarah L. Winchester, the heiress to the empire that manufactured the rifle, was told that the Winchester family was cursed and haunted by ghosts who were killed by Winchester rifles. She moved to San Jose, California, and built the Winchester Mystery House, a large and complex mansion supposedly designed to ward off these spirits.
- Woody Strode used a sawed off Winchester similar to Steve McQueen's rifle from the television series Wanted: Dead or Alive
- Lord Lovat, an eccentric Commando, took his personal Winchester rifle ashore at Sword Beach on D-Day and continued to carry it throughout the Normandy campaign.
- The character Vincent Valentine in the video game Final Fantasy VII has the option of wielding a Winchester rifle.
- One of the Medical Mechanica robots in FLCL wields a Winchester M1892 lever-action rifle.
- In the movie Babel, two boys test the range of a Winchester rifle in the Moroccan desert, setting in motion the events of the film.
- The opening minutes of the movie The Last Samurai feature a drunken Captain Algren (played by Tom Cruise) demonstrating the rifle for the Winchester company.
- The journey of a Model 1873, and the fate of its successive owners, is the focal point of the 1950 James Stewart movie Winchester '73
[edit] See also
- Oliver Winchester
- Winchester Repeating Arms Company
- Winchester Model 70
- John Browning
- Benjamin Tyler Henry
- Henry rifle
[edit] References
- ↑ Out With A Bang: The Loss of the Classic Winchester Is Loaded With Symbolism, Washington Post, January 21, 2006
- ↑ Winchester Rifles to Be Discontinued, Washington Post, January 18, 2006
- [1] [http://www.havegunwillvote.com/index.php?sec=news&id=130&vo=3 Know the enemy: Have gun will vote.com, May 19, 2003
- [2] Labor history, November 17, 2006
- End of an era as Winchester rifle plant prepares to close, Pittsburgh Tibune-Review, January 18, 2006
- End of an era as Winchester rifle plant prepares to close, NC Times.com January 17, 2006
- [3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brady_Campaign