Have you ever thought of the effects ISIS has on us and the military? In the article “A Case for Kill switches in Military Weaponry” by Johnathan Zittrain we notice that he mentions ISIS and how they stole our weapons. He also mentions that he believes that the only productive way to about protecting them is to create a “kill switch.” Despite lacking a ton of evidence Zittrain has an effective argument because he uses ethos, pathos, and logos making it clear to the audience that he knows what he is writing about.…
The other tech was The US used the 1895 model of the Gatling gun. This was not a machine gun, but it was a weapon that could fire very rapidly, seeming like a machine…
Kai Kloepfer invented the gun in 2013 as an entry for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. There, he won the grand prize and a $50,000 grant. The grant, given to him by the Smart Tech Challenges Foundation, will assist Kloepfer in developing the technology. Kloepfer, who grew up in Boulder, Colorado, invented the gun in response to several mass…
Richard Jordan Gatling was born in January 1818 in Winton North Carolina, and died at the age of 85 in 1903. Gatling's career as an inventor began when he assisted his father in the construction of machines for sowing cottonseeds, and also for thinning cotton plants. He spent a lot of time in the fields with his father who helped him build some of his inventions. Richard Jordan Gatling was a medical doctor with numerous patents for his farm equipment inventions.…
Throughout the countless years between the American Revolutionary War and the American Civil War, weapons have developed from the primitive muskets used. A few of these weapons include Colt Revolvers, Springfield Rifles, Spencer Repeating Rifles, Confederate Breechloaders, Billinghurst-Requa Battery Gun, and the Gatling Gun. Although not used often during the Civil War, when it was introduced, the Gatling Gun was the one of the more influential weapons created during the Revolutionary War-Civil War period. The Gatling Gun marked the beginning of the era of machine guns.…
Americans succeeded in adding rifling to existing artillery pieces in early 1861 as they tasked for re-boring and rifling the old smoothbores to be compatible with new ammunition being industrialized. In order to be accurate the projectile needed to engage the rifling but still must remain small enough to load from the muzzle during battle. This was reached in diverse ways, which fall into three major classes: expansion - where a ring or cup of soft lead or copper expanded at the rounds base by the gases at firing; forcing cone - where the rear of the projectile (paper-Mache, lead ring -iron cup) was forced toward the front, expanding a band of soft metal into the rifling; and shaped - where the projectile was the same shape but a smaller diameter, and had ridges or flanges which fit into the rifling (Melton, 1994). A very famous howitzer of the civil was Whistling Dick. An eighteen-pound confederate siege and garrison weapon.…
The military ideally strives to protect its nation and continuously improve its technology to better suit the conditions of the era. During the Civil War, the amount of developed and improved technology was massive. Although there are many, there are certain ones that are highly significant or frequently used. For example, the gatling gun. Similar to present day machine guns and was used often on the battlefield to cause damage to multiple soldiers in a quick instance.…
Only a few decades later the flintlock system was invented. The flintlock followed the same style as the wheellock using flint to ignite the gunpowder. One of the big improvements to firearms was made 20 years after the first flintlock was created, the snaphaunce. The grand invention that was created by the Miquelet was the ‘frizzen’ which made it so the gunpowder in the gun would stay dry.…
Of all of the technological advances made by the time of the Civil War, the rifle had the biggest and best impact. The rifle was made much sooner than the Civil War. It was used as a piece of limited numbers and typically by specific troops in the midst of the Revolutionary War. At the beginning of the Civil War in 1861 both sides were still essentially using the old smooth-bore muskets. These muskets were not correct and did not have a long range. The weapon had a smooth barrel which used a round lead ball as ammunition. Right when given up the lead ball would bounce around inside the barrel. This made for inaccurate shots . After the Civil War had begun mass producing rifles instead of the old smooth-bore muskets.Rifles were a far superior…
The Crimean War was the first conflict for the percussion cap to be used. The percussion cap allows for an all-weather reliability of the rifle. The previous common mechanism of firearms was the flintlock. For the flintlock to ignite the powder, firing the projectile, it required a spark created by flint, hence “flintlock”. Flintlock based weapons were inoperable in wet weather, limiting its effectiveness and versatility. The percussion cap eliminated the flintlocks shortcomings and granted efficiency to the forces equipped with…
The election of 1860 was among four candidates: John Breckenridge, a Democrat, John Bell, Constitutional Union Party, Stephen Douglas, a Democrat, and Abraham Lincoln, a Republican from the North. When election day came and all votes were in Douglas had twelve electoral votes, Bell had thirty-nine, Breckenridge with seventy-two, and in the lead, Lincoln had 180 electoral votes (Peters and Woolley). Lincoln had won the election, but he had not won everything yet. The South would succeed into a new country called the Confederates and start a war over slavery. Lincoln would need some help to win the war, but what could give him the advantage? The solution were three new inventions. While many innovations were…
Dr. Richard Gatling was an inventor before the Civil War and turned his attention weaponry when the Civil War broke out. At this time the Gatling Gun is the only available rapid fire weapon (The Gatling Gun). The Gatling Gun almost didn’t see any action during the Civil War. A few Union army commanders bought Gatling Guns for their soldiers (Gatling Gun) The Gatling Gun was developed and used in the Civil War. The main arguments are how the Gatling Gun works and was used in the Civil War, why Gatling invented the Gatling Gun, the advancements on the battlefield, and the history of the Gatling Gun from start to end of the Civil War.…
During World War I, the defensive weapons used by the German were way more advanced than the offensive weapons of the U.S and their allies. Although the U.S came out on top breaking through the German defenses and forcing their troops to retreat to their trenches, we suffered a great amount of casualties. The lost battalion went into Argon Forest with approximately six hundred men, they left with over four hundred dog tags and less than two hundred men because of the defensive lines advanced armory. Thousand of men were lost during world war I because military leaders were slow to adapt their old-fashioned strategies and tactics to the new weapons. New technology made war more horrible and more complex than ever before. The United States and other countries felt the effects of the war for years afterwards.…
The current field of research into the cause of the downfall of the knightly class generally agrees that it was primarily a result of the introduction of gunpowder weaponry, but some recent scholarship suggests otherwise.…
The article written by the New York Times had a vastly different writing style than the Hartford Courant and The Chicago Tribune. The story was also published on April 13, 1861 in page one of the times and titled "The First Gun Fired by Fort Moultrie Against Fort Sumter". Like the other newspapers, there was no byline on the piece so the author is still unknown. What really differentiates how the New York Times wrote the piece was that they provided more context and actually wrote it as a news story. The piece has the details such as the time (4 a.m.), Fort Sumter returned the fire, the number of batteries that were in the bombardment (19) and how many actually fired (seven). The news article gives you a more in depth look in what occurred…