Every
western movie buff has been treated over and over again to the exploits
of the Colt Single Action Army sixgun and the Winchester levergun.
While nowhere near getting the exposure of the Winchester and Colt,
the Sharps 'buffalo gun' has starred in some memorable movies. While
I was in high school, the cover of GUNS magazine featured a Sharps
in the hands of Stewart Granger who co-starred as a buffalo hunter
with a villainous Robert Taylor in "The Last Hunt". While
attending graduate school one of my finer moments was also one of
my favorite movies as Mexican constable Burt Lancaster decimated
the bad guys with his long range Sharps. "That shot must have
been seven, eight hundred yards!" says the startled onlooker
as Burt (Bob Valdez) takes a bad guy off his fleeing horse. "More
like one tow-san" says Burt.
And
can anyone forget the ultimate Sharps cowboy, Tom Selleck as he
unlimbers his Sharps and rolls a bucket off into eternity in "Quigley
Down Under"? That movie has done for the Sharps rifle what
Dirty Harry did for the Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum back in the
1970's. But you say the Smith & Wesson is a modern gun and the
Sharps is no more. Wrong! As this is written at least four companies
are offering modern copies, replicas of the old 1874 Sharps rifle
and in calibers such as .45-70, .45-90, .45-110, and .50-70. It
has been my good pleasure this summer, thanks to the goodness of
its owner Chuck Bane of Bull-X, to test a Sharps 1874 single-shot
chambered in what was not one of the original cartridges, the .45-70.
The
Model 1863 Sharps percussion rifle saw service during the Civil
War but it was the Model 1874 cartridge Sharps that became the epitome
of what a nineteenth century hunting rifle should be. And don't
believe all buffalo hunters used the big .45 or bigger .50 caliber
Sharps. Well known buffalo hunter Frank Mayer favored an eleven
pound, thirty-two inch barreled .40-90 Sharps whose flat shooting
characteristics allowed him to take buffalo out to 600 yards. This
before the days of the sporting rifle scopes and modern smokeless
ammunition. All Sharps rifles, both original and replicas require
the use of black powder cartridges for the utmost in safety and
efficiency.
The
original Sharps Model 1874 was manufactured from 1871 to 1881 in
calibers .40-90, .44-77, .45-110, .50-70, and .50-90. The action
is a falling block, breech-loading, single-shot. Triggers could
be single or double set and barrels could run from twenty-two inches
to thirty-two inches. Just as with the modern replicas, sights were
the standard hunting type or the aperture rear with a globe style
front sight.
To
operate the Sharps, the big hammer is placed at half-cock, the lever
is operated down and forward opening the breech, a cartridge is
loaded, the lever is brought back and up, the breech block closes,
the hammer is cocked and the Sharps is ready to fire.
Being
a black powder firearm, the Sharps must be cleaned post haste after
a shooting session. This is made relatively easy by two things.
One is the ingenious design of the Sharps and the other is the wonder
of modern cleaning solvents. For the Sharps itself, a lever on the
breech is simply moved and withdrawn and the block drops out into
the hand for easy cleaning.
To
keep the Sharps operating and also to clean it I call upon Shiloh
Creek. They have a whole range of items for the black powder shooter
not the least of which is their Black Powder Bore Solvent. A few
swipes with a tight patch soaked in this solvent and the barrel
is clean.
Shiloh
Creek is also called upon for the loading of black powder cartridges,
in this case .45-70. Forget everything you have ever learned about
reloading when you approach black powder if your experience has
been strictly smokeless powder. Black powder is not run through
a powder measure but is scooped. It is then dropped a minimum of
twenty-four inches through a drop tube such as offered by Shiloh
Creek. This allows the powder to settle into the brass case that
is held in place by the shellholder mounted in the base of the Shiloh
Creek Drop tube. Once the powder is in place, I place a cardboard
wad cut from the back of a legal pad or an Ox-Yoke Wonder Wad over
the powder.
Not
just any old bullet is used with black powder. Forget the jacketed
bullets and use either home cast or commercial cast bullets. None
of the commercial cast bullets that I know of are properly lubed
for black powder shooting. Bullets need special lube for black powder
shooting and that lube is SPG. Designed by competition black powder
shooters, the buttery consistency of SPG lube helps to keep fouling
of the bore to a minimum and what does occur is kept soft. Before
I started using SPG, I would have barrels so fouled that is was
almost impossible to get a patch through them.
If
one is going to shoot a lot, it also pays big dividends to have
Shiloh Creek Black Powder bore solvent handy for running a wet patch
through the barrel from time to time. Cartridge cases also must
be given extra care. I drop my fired cases in a plastic gallon milk
jug half full of soapy water and slosh them around between shots.
When arriving home, the cases are washed in hot soapy water, rinsed
and dried by laying them out on newspaper. Once the primers are
punched out, the primer pockets are cleaned with Q-Tips and then
cases are tumbled clean. It should go without saying that once they
are used for black powder, brass cases are kept segregated from
my smokeless brass.
An
eleven pound rifle with black powder loads is definitely a joy to
shoot even with full house black powder loads with 500 grain bullets.
My test gun is marked on the thirty-inch barrel in three different
places with OLD RELIABLE in script and C. SHARPS ARMS CO., INC BIG
TIMBER MONTANA U.S.A., and .45 2 1/10 in block type. The hammer,
lever, and breech block are all case-hardened and the octagon barrel
is a deep blue finish. The stock is a nicely grained piece of dark
walnut with an oil finish and silver fore-end tip. Sights are buckhorn
rear with a brass blade front sight. The rear sight can be folded
backwards revealing a typical military style long range sight.
I
did not put the Sharps Model 1874 on paper since it was equipped
with hunting sights that were not user friendly for my eyes. I did
set up one of Austin Precision's automatically resetting targets
at 100 yards with the silhouette pig bolted in place and this proved
to me that I would have no trouble using the Sharps as a hunting
rifle.
I
may just have a vivid imagination, but I would almost swear to the
fact that while I was testing the Sharps, I could smell buffalo.
As
I would set the gun down and concentrate, even with my ears that
are not the best, I could actually hear the stomach rumbling of
big bulls. As I fondled the big Sharps I suddenly felt like dressing
in leather and furs and riding a pinto pony. Now this has never
happened to me before, nor has it happened since. Only while shooting
the Sharps. Strange.
After
talking with my good friend and fellow Shootist, Tedd Adamovich,
we decided to order our own Sharps rifles. We both now have .45-110's
with two sets of sights, the original hunting sights plus Vernier
scaled rear aperture and globe front sight. Who knows, I may want
to get into black powder silhouetting some day. We do know that
we have a date for a buffalo hunt. |