Springfield Model 1863 Musket — From The Vault

2 days ago
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Video Description:
Join us as we go deep into the vault and pull out a remarkable piece of American Civil War history: the Springfield Model 1863 rifled musket. In this episode we’ll explore its origin, construction, change-variants, condition, and what makes it a treasure in any historical arms collection.

What you’ll see in this video:

A look at the overall rifle: length, weight, visual profile, how it compares to its predecessor, the Model 1861.

Identification of manufacturer and serial markings: how to spot the Springfield Armory or contract maker stamps, date codes, proof marks.

Inspection of the barrel & rifling: the .58 caliber bore, rifled design, and how that impacted performance in the field.

Detail of the lock mechanism, percussion hammer & nipple: how percussion ignition changed infantry arms in the Civil War era.

Furniture and stock condition: wood grain, any war-era repairs, banding, sling swivels, and original finish vs patina.

Historical context: what this firearm would have experienced in 1863-1865 — likely use in the Union infantry, mass production late in the war, and the shift toward breech­loading conversions after the war ended. (The Model 1863 was the last muzzle-loading long arm produced by Springfield Armory.)
Wikipedia
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Collector’s & preservation notes: how to handle, store, and appreciate such a piece; what to watch for in terms of restoration vs maintaining original provenance; what kinds of condition factors affect value.

A closer shot of special markings or features: maybe a variation such as Type I vs Type II variant, or a contract musket with different banding.
Wikipedia

Final thoughts: why this particular piece is special, what it adds to a collection or historical display, and encouragement to like/subscribe for more “vault”-type reveals.

Check out the USCCA

https://www.usconcealedcarry.com/

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