Quote:Sometime in the 1970's the DuPont plant blew up and i rebember reading it took two years to repair.In the meantime, C & H powder was imported from england.I shot some in my cartridge guns and muzzleloaders.
Pickup, thanks for the post with your historical knowledge about DuPont and C&H being shipped into the US during the '70's. You kind of tie a couple of thoughts together that I have. If I may, here's what I know:
* DuPont was also cited at this time by the Federal govt for Restraint of Trade. It was the end of DuPont's black powder business ... with possibly a minor twist - see below
* In the late '60's, I believe 1967, Nobel Industries Ltd bought out C&H who was making their powder in Ardeer, Scotland. At this time, Nobel was the sole source for gunpowder in the British Isles
* Sometime after C&H was bought out, Nobel started selling BP in the United States using a Canadian subsidiary called CIL, Canadian Industries Limited Ammunition Company. The cans said - Made in Great Britain. And the interesting part, on the Meteor can it said under C-L-I, Plattsburgh, NY
* I believe, but haven't been able to verify it ... that DuPont opened an office in Plattsburgh, contracted through Nobel
to have DuPont salesmen sell the Meteor powder to retail stores in the US. And further, I believe the Nobel Meteor powder to be C&H inventory or produced by C&H processes and employees
How did I speculate that DuPont was selling Nobel powder (possibly C&H) in the US? Because there was a small gun store that went out of business due to death of the owner and the only powder he carried was DuPont and Meteor, with the Plattsburgh office address
I was fortunate to obtain a nice inventory of the old DuPont and Meteor powder from the owners wife. Here's what the Meteor looks like with
1973 lot numbers!...
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links) So the powder trail was: Ardeer, Scotland - Canada - US