Gun Barons
The Weapons That Transformed America and the Men Who Invented Them
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- $349.00
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- $349.00
Descripción editorial
"A dazzling epic of inventors, wars, arms, and men." – Daniel Mark Epstein, author of The Lincolns: Portrait of a Marriage
"Deeply researched, rich in insight, Gun Barons widens our understanding even as it enchants us with its masterful prose." – Jim Rasenberger, author of Revolver: Sam Colt and the Six-Shooter That Changed America
"John Bainbridge, Jr. cuts through the myths, romance, and propaganda to deliver true accounts of inspired drive and monomania, of catastrophic mistakes and vaults of genius." – Doug J. Swanson, author of Cult of Glory: The Bold and Brutal History of the Texas Rangers
"This book proves that guns have shaped, and continue to shape, our world." – Howard E. Wasdin, author of Seal Team Six: The Incredible Story of an Elite Sniper
"A compelling tale of action and ingenuity." – James Grant, author of John Adams: Party of One
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It's the nineteenth century. As America prepares for civil war, five men living within ninety miles of one another will change the course of history. The invention and refinement of the repeating firearm—the precursor to today's automatic weapons—means life in America and beyond will never be the same again.
In this riveting work of narrative history, veteran reporter John Bainbridge, Jr. vividly brings to life the five charismatic and idiosyncratic men at the heart of the story: the huckster and hard-living Samuel Colt; the cunning former shirt-maker Oliver Winchester; the constant tinkerer Horace Smith; the resilient and innovative businessman Daniel Wesson; and the skinny abolitionist Christopher Spencer. As the men competed ferociously, each trying to corner the market for repeating weapons, invention and necessity collided in a perfect storm: America was crashing violently towards furious sectarianism, irrevocable tensions, and, of course, bloodthirsty war.
Though capable of firing many times without reloading, astonishingly, the new guns faced a government backlash for using too much ammunition. Sold directly to soldiers, sometimes just as they were walking into battle, they quickly became coveted possessions, both during the Civil War and in the conquering of the West—and thus America's romance with personal firearms was born.
Wide-ranging and vividly told, this is a gripping story of tenacity, conviction, innovation, and pure heartless greed.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist and lawyer Bainbridge (coauthor, American Gunfight) spotlights in this laudatory history the "keen inventors and wily businessmen" who built America's gun industry. Contending that gun manufacturing was inextricably linked to the rise of "mechanized production and interchangeable parts," Bainbridge documents how mass-produced weapons such as the Remington and Colt revolvers and the Spencer repeating rifle contributed to the settlement of the American West and the Union's victory in the Civil War. He also delves into the colorful biographies of America's leading gun manufacturers, noting that Eliphalet Remington II was a "romantic youth with pacifist leanings" who wrote poetry before he founded the company that bears his name, and that Oliver Winchester drifted from carpentry to the clothing business to the firearms trade. Though these "gun barons" accelerated the demise of American craftsmen and the rise of large corporations, their names are still synonymous with "old-fashioned pluck and Yankee ingenuity," Bainbridge notes. Flowery constructions ("Free of tyranny and drunk on possibility, the United States barreled into the mid-nineteenth century with a sense of conquest and creativity") occasionally disrupt the book's otherwise crisp, journalistic prose, and Bainbridge refrains from fully reckoning with the negative aspects of America's gun culture. Still, firearms enthusiasts will savor this brisk and entertaining account.