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Royal Small Arms Factory(RSAF), Enfield Lock, Middlesex. Facilities on the river Lea, known as the Lock were leased by the British government to make gunpowder. A ‘smallarms manufactory was erected on the site during the Napoleonic wars(1804) to assemble muskets. The site was purchased by the crown in 1812. The first models of Enfield revolver, the .476 Mark I and Mark II, were official British military side arms from 1880 through 1887, and issue side arms of the Northwest Mounted Police in Canada from 1883 until 1911. NWMP Commissioner Acheson G. Irvine ordered 200 Mark 2s in 1882, priced at C$15.75 each, which were shipped by London's Montgomery and Workman in November that year, arriving in December. They replaced the Adams. Irvine liked them so much, in one of his final acts as Commissioner, he ordered another 600, which were delivered in September 1885, his replacement, Lawrence W. Herchmer, reported the force was entirely outfitted with Enfields (in all 1,079 were provided) and was pleased with them, but concerned about the .476 round being too potent. The first batch was stamped NWMP-CANADA (issue number between) after delivery; later purchases were not. They were top-break single- or double-action, and fitted with lanyard rings. Worn spindle arms would fail to hold empty cases on ejection, and worn pivot pins could cause barrels to become loose, resulting in inaccuracy. Its deep rifling would allow firing of slugs of between .449 and .476 in (11.4 and 12.1 mm) diameter. Complaints began arising as early as 1887, influenced in part by the British switching to Webleys, and by 1896, hinge wear and barrel loosening were a real issue. Beginning in late 1904, the Mark II began to be in favor of the .45 calibre Colt New Service revolver, but the Enfield remained in service until 1911. The .476 Enfield cartridge of the Enfield Mk I/Mk II were chambered for fired a 265 gr (17.2 g) lead bullet, loaded with 18 gr (1.2 g) of black powder. The cartridge was, however, found to be somewhat underpowered during the Afghan War and other contemporary Colonial conflicts, lacking the stopping power believed necessary for military use at the time. Unlike most other self-extracting revolvers (such as the Webley service revolvers or the Smith & Wesson No. 3 Revolver), the Enfield Mk I/Mk II was somewhat complicated to unload, having an Owen Jones selective extraction/ejection system which was supposed to allow the firer to eject spent cartridges, whilst retaining live rounds in the cylinder. The Enfield Mk I/Mk II had a hinged frame, and when the barrel was unlatched, the cylinder would move forward, operating the extraction system and allowing the spent cartridges to simply fall out. The idea was that the cylinder moved forward far enough to permit fired cases to be completely extracted (and ejected by gravity), but not far enough to permit live cartridges (i.e., those with projectiles still present, and thus longer in overall length) from being removed in the same manner. The system was obsolete as soon as the Enfield Mk I was introduced, especially as it required reloading one round at a time via a gate in the side (much like the Colt Single Action Army or the Nagant M1895 revolvers). Combined with the somewhat cumbersome nature of the revolver, and a tendency for the action to foul or jam when extracting cartridges, the Enfield Mk I/Mk II revolvers were never popular and eventually replaced in 1889 by the .455 caliber Webley Mk I revolver. This revolver was manufactured by the Enfield factory. Manufacturing quality is good with reasonable finish. The Mk 1 revolver was made in August 1880 with a hinged frame, designed by Owen Jones and Mk2.was approved in April !882, followed in 1888 with a Mk2 ‘with a safety catch’. But it was soon replaced by the more efficient Webley pattern 7. A unique mechanism slide the roll forward horizontally on its axis when the barrel is swivelled down, to extract the cases in the process. This action’s leverage gives a much stronger extraction for the longer .476 round’s case. The roll has Church steeple fluting. The trigger mechanism is double action and a version of the Webley solid frame model’s mechanism. It is classified as an antique in the USA. (Ref. ‘Pistols of the world’ by Hogg and Weeks p94, Dictionary of guns an gunmakers by John Walter P167)
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