

Based on the success of filling these orders, subsequent contracts followed in the 1850s. Model 1841 Percussion Mississippi rifles. Shortly after, Remington took over a defaulted contract (by John Griffith of Cincinnati) for 5,000 U.S. Army with rifles in the Mexican–American War (1846 to 1848). Navy with its first breech-loading rifle. In 1848, the company purchased gun making machinery from the Ames Manufacturing Company of Chicopee, Massachusetts, and took over a contract for Jenks breechloading percussion carbines for the U.S. After 1846, first martial longarm and then revolver production dominated the company's workforce.
#Remington gun factory Patch
As demand increased, the Remingtons added other parts to their inventory, first percussion locks made in Birmingham, England but marked with their stamp "REMINGTON", and later sets of brass gun furniture, including trigger guards, butt plates, and patch boxes. Many, if not most, of the independent gunsmiths in the Mohawk Valley purchased completed (but not rifled) barrels from Remington and assembled them into firearms custom ordered by their customers. These barrels, marked with the distinctive "REMINGTON" stamp near their breeches, were recognized for their quality and reasonable price. During this period, the Remingtons specialized almost exclusively in the manufacture of rifle barrels. Remington's third son, Eliphalet III, would later join the company as well. Remington & Son"), and in 1845 his second son, Samuel, also joined the company, afterwards called "E. In 1839 Eliphalet was joined by his oldest son, Philo Remington (to make the business "E. The move coincided with the elder Eliphalet's death, and Eliphalet II assumed control of the business. To meet the increased demand for rifle barrels, in 1828 the Remingtons moved their forge and foundry from its rural setting to 100 acres (0.4 km²) of land they had purchased astride the canal and abutting the Mohawk River near a town then called Morgan's Landing (later Ilion), New York. With the completion of the Erie Canal, connecting Buffalo with Albany, commerce in the Mohawk Valley expanded remarkably as did the demand for rifle barrels. Despite not winning the match, he proceeded to make barrels to meet the growing demand for flintlock rifles in the Mohawk Valley. Įliphalet II forged his first rifle barrel as a young blacksmith in 1816 and finished second place in a local shooting match with it. Both versions have him taking the barrel to a gunsmith to have it rifled. The other states that he forged a barrel from wrought iron to see if he could build a better rifle than he could buy.

One holds that the younger Remington wanted to purchase a rifle and lacked the money to buy one so he made his own. There are two versions of the origin story of the first Remington rifle barrel.
