History of Firearms
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Firearms history gets compressed into elevator pitches a lot — "guns evolved, wars happened, here we are." This piece actually traces the mechanical logic behind each transition, which is worth slowing down for.
The matchlock clamped a smoldering slow match in a serpentine lever. Pull the trigger, the arm dips, the match touches the priming powder. For the first time, a soldier could aim with both hands.
That's the whole story of firearm ergonomics right there — every trigger, grip angle, stock geometry, and optic mount since 1400 is downstream of that one problem getting solved. Next time you're getting a good cheek weld and a clean sight picture, that's 600 years of iteration you're benefiting from.
Reverend Alexander Forsyth, a Scottish Presbyterian minister tired of flintlock sparks startling his ducks, patented the concept in 1807. Misfire rates dropped from one in fifteen to one in two hundred.
One-in-fifteen misfires. Think about that the next time you're annoyed that your carry gun had a failure to feed on some cheap reloads. The percussion cap was a reliability revolution that we've completely forgotten to appreciate because modern ammo is so consistent. Your $18 box of Federal HST fires every single time and nobody blinks.
The Winchester Model 1873 became "The Gun That Won the West." Chambered in .44-40 WCF — the same cartridge as the Colt Single Action Army revolver — it was a deliberate marketing strategy: a frontiersman could carry one caliber for both rifle and pistol.
That's a 150-year-old solution to a problem people are still chasing at the range — guys running 9mm carbines paired with their carry pistol, or .357 Magnum lever guns alongside their revolvers. The logic hasn't changed at all. One caliber, two platforms, simplified logistics.
Hitler initially opposed the program, so developers disguised it as "Maschinenpistole 43." When he saw enthusiastic soldiers asking for "more of these new rifles," he relented and personally named it "Sturmgewehr" — storm rifle.
The word "assault rifle" has been politically radioactive for decades, and the origin story is that it was literally a branding decision made by Adolf Hitler in a wartime program disguised from its own chain of command. That context tends to get lost every time someone argues about the term at the gun shop counter.
What's a piece of firearms history — a specific gun, a cartridge, a battle, anything — that actually changed how you think about the gear you carry or shoot today?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club
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