GENERALLY: The British .577 Snider was the most widely
used of the Snider varieties, (the action
invented by the American Jacob Snider) being adopted by Britain as an alteration/conversion
system for its ubiquitous P/53 rifle-musket muzzle loading arms. In trials,
the Snider P/53 conversions proved both more accurate than original P/53s
and much faster firing as well. From 1866 on the rifles were converted
in large numbers at Enfield beginning with the initial pattern, the Mark
I. New rifles started as P/53s but received a new breech block/receiver
assembly. Converted rifles retained the original iron barrel, furniture,
locks and hammer. The Mark III rifles were newly made, with steel barrels
which were so marked, flat nosed hammers and are the version equipped with
a latch locking breech block. The Snider was the subject of substantial
immitation, approved and questionable, including the near exact copy of
the Nepalese Snider, the Dutch
Snider, Danish Naval Snider, and
the "unauthorized" adaptations of the French
Tabatiere and Russian Krnka.
It served throughout the British Empire, including India, Australia, New
Zealand and the Dominion of Canada, until its gradual phase out by
the Martini-Henry, beginning in 1874 but not
being completed with volunteer and militia forces until the late 1880's,
the dawn of the smokeless era!!!
PHOTO: The rifle shown is a Mark II converted from a P/53 Enfield rifle. The breech block is not positively latched at closing but held closed by a detent in the rear face of the block which clicks into the face of the back of the receiver.
DISTINGUISHING CHARECTERISTICS: The Snider-Enfield Infantry rifle is particularly long at 54 1/4 inches. The breech block houses a diagonally downward sloping firing pin struck with a front-action lock mounted hammer. The action operates by the firer cocking the hammer, flipping the block out of the receiver to the right by grasping the left mounted breech block lever, and then pulling the block back to extract the spent case. There is no ejector, the case being lifted out or, more usually, the rifle being rolled onto its back to allow the case to drop out. The rifles are usually marked Mk I, Mk II or Mk III, the Mark IIIs being those with steel barrels and locking latches on the breech blocks in place of the simple integral block lifing tang. Look for a substantial number of British proofs.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES:
Subj: Blackpowder Military
Rifles (UK)
Date: 99-10-05 08:12:30 EDT
From: johnbaines@postmaster.co.uk
(John Baines)
To: kdcolospgs@aol.com
Hi Keith
A few notes on the Snider which
may help:
There were five marks:
The following were standard 3-band Enfields converted:
MkI - for original Pottet case
- breech has rounded rebate for case rim.
MkI* - MkI altered to use Boxer
case ie breech rebate altered to square.
MkII* - as per MkI* but built that
way not altered from MkI.
MkII** - breech block design changed
to strengthen.
MkIII - Purpose built, (not converted)
with steel barrel and locking lug mechanism for securing breech, replacing
the latching pin of earlier models.
--
Regards
John
The
Portugese Snider Contract:
Page initially built June 5, 1997
Revised September 1, 1999
Revised October 5, 1999
Revised (Portugese) August 16, 2003