James Paris Lee

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Born
James Paris Lee

(1831-08-09)9 August 1831
Died24 February 1904(1904-02-24) (aged 72)
Galt, Ontario, Canada
OccupationWeapons designer
SpouseCaroline Chrysler Lee
James Paris Lee
James Paris Lee
Born
James Paris Lee

(1831-08-09)9 August 1831
Died24 February 1904(1904-02-24) (aged 72)
Galt, Ontario, Canada
OccupationWeapons designer
SpouseCaroline Chrysler Lee
ChildrenWilliam Lee, George Miles Lee
RelativesJohn Lee (brother)

James Paris Lee (9 August 1831 – 24 February 1904) was a British Canadian inventor and arms designer. He is best known for having invented the Lee Model 1879 rifle, which is the first bolt-action detachable box magazine-fed rifle. These features would be incorporated into more successful repeating rifle designs later on, such as in the Lee–Metford and Lee–Enfield rifle series.[1]

Born in Hawick, Scotland, Lee emigrated with his family to Galt, Upper Canada in 1836 at age 5. He built his first gun at the age of 12, using an old horse-pistol barrel,[2] a newly-carved walnut stock, and a priming pan made from a halfpenny. The gun failed to function effectively when first fired, but started Lee's interest in gunsmithing and invention.

In 1858, James Lee and his wife Caroline Lee (née Chrysler, of the later automotive family) moved to Wisconsin in the US,[2] where they had two sons: William (born in 1859) and George (1860). They later returned to Canada in 1865.

Rifle developments

In 1861, Lee developed a breech-loading cartridge conversion for the Springfield Model 1861 rifle musket, managing to acquire a contract for 1,000 rifles from the US Army during the American Civil War.[2] The Lee Civil War carbine was manufactured in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In total 250 were delivered but due to a bore diameter error, these were rejected by the army and the weapon did not see use in the Civil War.[3] These guns are rare and highly collectible.

In 1872, he submitted a single-shot breech-loading rifle to a US Army Trials board which was considering a replacement for the 'trapdoor' system of Erskine S. Allin, which had begun in 1865 as a conversion of the Model 1861 Rifle Musket. The Allin design had progressed through several modifications, including the Model 1866 (another conversion) and the models of 1868, 1869, and 1870. With the exception of the M1865 in .58 rimfire, all the others were .50-70 centerfire. Lee's sample (in the newly-authorized .45-70 cartridge) had a hammer-operated falling-block design, similar to the Peabody and the Martini. His rifle did not win the trials (that honour went to the latest Allin design, the Model 1873) but with further consideration his gun was found worthy. $10,000 was appropriated, and Lee moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, to supervise construction of the new rifle. Tooling consumed most of the money, and only 143 rifles were built. Known to collectors as the "Model 1875 Springfield-Lee Vertical Breech", it is one of the rarest and most desirable Springfield arms of the post-Civil War period.

The Lee magazine systems and rifles

Later life

References

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