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19th U.S. Patent Model: ''Mode of Priming Metallic Cartridges''

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:200.00 USD
19th U.S. Patent Model: ''Mode of Priming Metallic Cartridges''
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Rare and Genuine 19th Century U.S. Patent Office Model ''Mode of Priming Metallic Cartridges'', Patent No. 40772 granted to C. Sharps on Dec. 1, 1863, being a device mounted on a flat wooden base measuring 10.5'' long by 3.875'' wide, consisting of a hand-cranked rotating brass wheel at one end connected by a flexible belt (not present) to a pulley-driven rod that seats metallic cartridge cases into a rotating 3.875'' wheel having 6 holes below; an adjacent cup-like dispenser has a vertical rod that inserts the ''detonate'' material; both move up/down on a standing post that permits the cartridge wheel to revolve sequentially. Measuring 3.5'' high, the device is simple yet well made. Attached to the model by a faded red ribbon is a 3'' x 3.25'' manila card tag marked ''No. 40772/C. Sharps/Mode of Priming/Metallic Cartridges/Patented Dec. 1st/1863/Cartridge Loading'', plus four color photos of this machine and tag, three copies of Patent Office pages illustrating the device and describing its operation, and 12 copies of pages from an article titled ''Patently Clear: Firearms Patents of the 19th Century,'' by Bret Farnum in the Dec. 1981 issue of The Gun Report. Condition of the model is very good, the 1863 tag is quite fragile as expected. This patentee was famed American inventor and gunmaker, Christian Sharps of Philadelphia, as confirmed by the accompanying patent papers. Est.: $400-$600.