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US Socket Bayonet For M-1809 Prussian Muskets - Extremely Scarce

US Socket Bayonet For M-1809 Prussian Muskets - Extremely Scarce

  • Product Code: EWB-1551-SOLD
  • Availability: Out Of Stock
  • $0.00


This is a great example of an extremely scarce US made socket bayonet for use with the Prussian M-1809 Potsdam musket. The bayonet is well documented in Robert Reilly’s seminal American Socket Bayonets & Scabbards and is listed at Figure 99 in that book. During the American Civil War, hundreds of thousands of obsolete Continental arms were imported by the US for use during the first 12-18 months of the war. Not all of these muskets arrived on these shores as complete stands of arms (including their bayonet and other necessary accessories), which created a need for US made socket bayonets that would function on these imported muskets. The US Ordnance Department proceeded to procure socket bayonets with standard US M-1855 style bayonet blades, but mated with sockets that would fit the European import arms. Among the patterns of bayonets procured were sockets that would fit the Austrian M-1842 Laukart latch musket, the Austrian M-1854 Lorenz and the Prussian M-1809 Potsdam musket. What is most interesting about the Potsdam musket bayonets is that they seem to have been an afterthought. All of the known examples were fabricated from US made bayonets for the Austrian M-1842 Laukart system muskets. It is quite apparent that the socket retains a portion of the mortise cut that was designed to engage the Laukart latch under the barrel of the Austrian muskets. However, the rear portion of socket has been re-machined to engage the spade shaped spring catch that was located under the barrel of Prussian M-1809 Potsdam muskets. It is not clear if these bayonets were a production over run that were subsequently modified, or if the need for Potsdam bayonets was simply much greater than that for Austrian M-1842 bayonets. Another option (not noted by Reilly) is that the bayonet catch of the Austrian M-1799/28 series muskets, and some early M-1842 muskets was very similar to the Prussian catch and these bayonets may have been modified for use on the Austrian muskets that were equipped with this earlier pattern of catch. Robert Reilly’s research indicates that these bayonets were initially manufactured by (and possibly modified by) the firm of Ridgeway & Rufe of Germantown, PA. Allen Ridgeway was listed in the 1856 Germantown directory as a manufacturer and John Rufe was listed as a mechanic. In 1860 they were subsequently listed as “fork makers”, and by 1861 were listed as “cutlers’ and “manure fork manufacturers”. They do not appear as “bayonet makers’ until the 1863 and retain that listing until they disappeared from the directors after 1866. Ridgeway & Rufe had a major contract to provide socket bayonets to the firm of Alfred Jenks & Company (Bridesburg), for use on the M-1861 contract rifle muskets that Jenks delivered to the Ordnance Department. This explains the availability of the M-1855 style blades, and clearly any manufacturer who could produce manure forks would be the perfect choice to produce bayonets for the obsolete European muskets, that were not held in high regard by the soldiers that carried them!

The US Socket Bayonet for Prussian M-1809 Musket is in about VERY GOOD+ to NEAR FINE condition. The bayonet is full length. The face of the blade is clearly marked with a crisp US and an alphanumeric US arsenal mating code is present on the side of the socket: N 94. These mating codes were used to help keep the non-interchangeable bayonets with their appropriate muskets, after they had been fit to each other. The bayonet retains much of its original arsenal bright finish, which has dulled and muted somewhat to a more pewter tone. There are scattered patches of age discoloration and oxidation present on the bayonet as well, mostly on the blade. Most of the darker patches are smooth and are pitted areas. There are scattered patches of peppering and pinpricking present on the metal, but only a few small patches of actual light pitting are present on the metal. The socket is in good, round condition and retains the applied eccentric locking ring at the rear, which is in fine, functional condition. The socket bore diameter measures about .862”, very close to the .858” listed on Reilly’s example and not out of the norm for muskets that had widely varying bore diameters.

Overall this is a really nice example of an extremely scare US socket bayonet manufactured for use on some of the stop gap arms that were imported during the early days of the American Civil War. This pattern of socket bayonet is very rarely offered for sale, and in all my years of collecting and dealing (with an emphasis on imported infantry arms and their bayonets) this is the first example that I have ever had the opportunity to own. This bayonet deserves a place in a very advanced Civil War import arm collection or an equally advanced Civil War socket bayonet collection. Don’t miss your chance to own a really scarce piece of early US Civil War history.

SOLD

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Tags: US, Socket, Bayonet, For, M, 1809, Prussian, Muskets, Extremely, Scarce