Hey guys,
Not sure if this was covered, I'm still looking through the forum archives.
I belong to a frontiersman reenactment group, and we love black powder shooting. Being a camping group, we have camp fire talk of shooters of the age, involving tall tales and myths that we don't get around with ever testing.
SO, first myth I'm sure a lot of you have heard of, the 400 yard shot. This was apparently done with a caliber larger than .50, and I even heard talks of knocking a mason jar off a fence post. Whether the shot hit the post and not the jar is another small argument.
Second, a legendary 2.00 caliber rifle. This was built by a legend in himself, Bofox. A short bald guy dressed in deerskins and apparently flosses his teeth with a flaming bistle whip. I have a picture of him, but the rifle isn't as clear as I wish it was. The story goes he loaded his rifle while running toward the range on a Seneca run, a myth in itself.
Third is the 9 second load. I know guys who load rifles reeeeaally fast, especially smooth bores. Personally I haven't tried to load fast besides out the back of a golf cart on the way to a range. The original revolutionary backwoodsmen claimed to be able to fire their first shot and within nine seconds fire a second shot. I don't think I have ever or will ever see one that fast, but maybe some of you out there have.
Fourth, a book that we received on joining the group I'm in tells of how a frontiersman lost the flint off his rifle while hunting and used the flash coming from the pan in his flintlock pistol to set off the rifle and killed his game.
Fifth and last I'm gonna bother with, this is a two part debate. One guy said this was a true story. Back when civil war reenactments weren't as safe as they should be, an infantryman loaded his rifle on the field realizing he had not loaded at camp, but because people were shooting pictures, he rushed the load and left his ramrod in the barrel. Shooting up into the air and not remembering that he left his rod loaded, his rod went across the field and hit another member in the shoulder. He was knocked to the ground and someone stopped the entire fight because they thought he had been hit critically. Not sure of all the details of the recognition of the hit, but apparently he got up and walked away without a scratch.
The second part of that myth was at my first black powder shooters safety course. The instructor mentioned that you should 1 always check for your ramrod after loading and 2 never use a too short ramrod for the mistake of leaving the rod in the barrel and forgetting it as it isn't sticking out. One instance that was said was that a ramrod was shot and lodged so far into a sandpile that only a few inches stuck out. 'Smart talk' by the younger ones was made of if you could kill two men with one ramrod since the redcoats were in such close columns.
I'd like to reassure you, all of these are myths. Most of the stories, even of modern myths, went from ear to ear before being told to myself. So if you doubt any of this, yea. It probably didn't happen exactly that way. But I'm asking which of these do you think is possible?
Just have fun, maybe I'll test a few someday.