THE AMERICAN KRAG RIFLE and CARBINE
Joe Poyer

The mystery of the so-called Philippine Constabulary rifles is
solved & the "School" rifle is introduced. A new & complete
exploded view is included as are instructions for assembly &
disassembly of the rifle & carbine. Edited by Craig Riesch.

The Krag rifle and carbine were the first smokeless powder,
magazine loading arms used by the United States Army. It was
adopted from a Norwegian design in 1892 and reached the troops
starting in mid-1894.
The Krag was the first precision-machined, small caliber,
magazine loading rifle adopted by the U.S. Army. This meant that
the production facilities and work force had to be completely
rebuilt and reorganized. In just four short years, the entire
U.S. Army, both mounted and dismounted branches, were completely
equipped with the new rifle and carbine. So successful had been
the design and initial production phase, that only minor changes
were made to the rifle and carbine afterward.
It was the ideal time to introduce a new rifle. The U.S. Army in
the 1890s was a peacetime organization. The frontier had been
settled in the late 1880s and the Army had been reduced in
strength to not quite 18,000 strong, and was scattered halfway
around the world from Plattsburgh, New York to Anchorage, Alaska
to Honolulu, Hawaii. All but two troops of cavalry were still
stationed west of the Mississippi River and no military
formations in regimental strength had been assembled since the
Sioux Wars in 1876-1877.
But the combination of Spanish imperialism in Cuba and the
sinking of the battleship, USS Maine, led the United States into
a short, sharp war in 1898 that gave way to a longer, more
bitter fight in the Philippines. In 1900, Chinese
revolutionaries styled the "Boxers" threatened to murder all
foreigners in China. The U.S. Army and Marines brought their
Krag rifles to mainland China in concert with forces from other
European nations and quickly relieved the siege of the Foreign
Legations at Peking and then helped clear the country of
insurgents.
Even though the Krag only served the U.S. Army for eleven years,
it did so admirably and saw much hard fighting. It only gave way
to the Model 1903 Springfield as the latter rifle could be
loaded quickly and easily with a five round clip.
The American Krag Rifle and Carbine provides the arms
collector, historian and target shooter with a part-by-part
analysis of what has been called the "rifle with the smoothest
bolt action ever designed." Each of the fifteen models of the
American Krag rifle and carbine are described in detail. All
changes to all parts are described and matched to serial number
ranges. A monthly serial number chart by production year has
been devised that will provide the collector with the year and
month in which his rifle or carbine was manufactured.
The mystery of the so-called Philippine Constabulary rifles is
solved and the "School" rifle is introduced. A new and complete
exploded view is included as are instructions for assembly and
disassembly of the rifle and carbine.
$19.95 |