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Hot Topic (More than 10 Replies) P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps (Read 13896 times)
powderman
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #15 - Aug 28th, 2015 at 9:50pm
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Huvius,

In your photo, the rear buckhorn barrel sight appears to not have a notch in the bottom of the opening of the buckhorn, or is this just the camera angle?

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Powderman
  
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Huvius
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #16 - Aug 30th, 2015 at 12:27pm
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powderman wrote on Aug 28th, 2015 at 9:50pm:
Huvius,

In your photo, the rear buckhorn barrel sight appears to not have a notch in the bottom of the opening of the buckhorn, or is this just the camera angle?

Regards,
Powderman


There is a notch.

I'm not thinking that the 40-90 is underpowered for any North American big game.
It is very similar in powder capacity and bullet weights to the 450/400 3-1/4"BPE rifles from England and they are very capable.
I have also read that as the great Bison herds thinned, the .40cal rifles came into wider use.
I left a phone message with Dr. Labowskie last weekend and haven't heard back.  Will try him on a weekday and see if he picks up.
  
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westerner
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #17 - Aug 30th, 2015 at 1:30pm
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To kill as many buffalo as they did in such a short time, most any rifle was used. 

That's what I've always thought. Not what I've read. Did the old time authors stretch the truth?  Wrote what they saw on a couple trips out West? 

            Joe.
  

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coljimmy
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #18 - Aug 31st, 2015 at 1:54am
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Well, John in PA, the fellow that butt shot that buffalo must have been one of those northern Kansas hunters, us Texans are better shots than that. 
 
Early in the commercial buffalo hunting, about anything was used to hunt, giving some validity to the unproven rumor that the army offered 50-70 ammunition free gratis, but after June 1872 when the big 50 was introduced, many of the better equipped hunters used them and Sellers made the point that the 40's were used later which were more economical in lead and powder, with adequate penetration.  This makes my 40-70 SS look good.  There was , however a time out from June 1874 to mid 1875 for the Red River (Buffalo) War when the Quahadi Comanche finally moved to Fort Sill leaving a respite for the southern herd.

J. Wright Mooar's big 50 is currently on loan to Frontier Texas museum in Abilene (Texas, of course) and Henry Sackett's 50-2&1/2 is still locally owned.

James
  
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bruce moulds
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #19 - Aug 31st, 2015 at 7:01am
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while the 40/70 would well have killed some bison, it was not the gun that the 40/90 was.
the smaller case used a lighter bullet, about 330 gns, and was really a ballistic twin of the 40/65, really a deer cartridge par excellance.
rifles for the bigger case were reputedly rebarrelled by gunsmiths with faster twists capable of handling 400+ gn bullets that needed powder volume to be effective. the std load was a 370/380 gn bullet at 1450 fps.
all the legends of the 50/2.5 tend to overpower the truth.
the 50s ran bullets of lower sectional density than the 45s and 40s due to recoil, and so had less penetration.
keep safe,
bruce.
  

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Huvius
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #20 - Aug 31st, 2015 at 7:18pm
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I was able to talk to Dr. Labowskie today and he did shed some light on the rifle.
It was shipped March 5th 1874 to G. O. Latham in Iron Mountain W.T.
He is not sure if it is Wyoming Territory or Washington Territory.
There was a Latham family in Iron Mountain Wyo. at the time and the patriarch, Stanton Latham, had a son named Gordon, so this Gordon could possibly be the original owner and this would place the rifle in close proximity to Bergersen in Cheyenne.
Here is a site with a little information on the family:
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)
  
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #21 - Sep 2nd, 2015 at 11:05am
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I saw a Antelope on the back of a Lathams horse. 

Your rifle most likely shot all sorts of game. Maybe even a buffalo or two. 

        Joe.
  

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SchwarzStock
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Re: P. Bergersen 40-90 Sharps
Reply #22 - Sep 3rd, 2015 at 5:28pm
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coljimmy wrote on Aug 28th, 2015 at 11:42am:
 
J.Wright Mooar in his very factual record stated that he loaded 110 grains in his 2&1/2 inch cases.  This is the same caliber Billy Dixon used to knock an Indian off of his horse at what was later measured as 1028 yards the day after the main battle.  Didn't kill him but broke a rib according to the Indian account of the fight.
James



Believe Dixon was using a Big 50, not a 40 caliber

SS
  

If your rifle is not in 7.62 and you can't hit what you are aiming at with de-linked machinegun ammo you are a pretender.
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