Re: Re: Charlie Kirk Murdered
  By: poindexter FORTRAN to Dumas Walker on Sun Sep 14 2025 09:10 am
The second amendment doesn't exclude illegally obtained guns. It was
also written in the age of breech-loading muskets.
there you are parroting typical liberal bullshit.
https://tinyurl.com/automatic1776
One common gun control argument is that America's Founding Fathers could not  have imagined the repeating "assault weapons" of today. But when the Second  Amendment was written in 1791, numerous guns already existed that were 
capable of far faster firing rates than the typical muzzle-loading flintlocks  of the era.
Single shot muskets were far from the only guns in 1791 available to the  public.
America's Founding Fathers saw natural rights as timeless and viewed the  rights of a free people as existing regardless of the medium in which they  were exercised. This included the right to bear arms as a means to prevent a  government monopoly of force, so advancements in firearms technology do not  change the intention of the Second Amendment.
threebarrel-hand-cannonhandgonne
Likely originating from China or nearby in East Asia, this type of 
"handgonne" is an example of early multi-shot portable firearms design.
Still, the question of which assault weapons the Founding Fathers knew about  is a fascinating and often misrepresented topic, so let's take a look at some  of the repeating rifles, volley guns, and fast loading firearms that were  available during their lifetimes.
Matchlock and wheelock revolvers date to the 16th century, and flintlock  revolvers were well-known repeating gun designs when the 2nd Amendment was  written.
The Chelembrom Repeating Flintlock
While it's true that the average flintlock in 1776 had to be reloaded after  every shot, the concept of repeating guns predates both the Second Amendment  and the American Revolution by several centuries. A variety of multi-shot  firearms were available well before the United States declared independence.  Among the most notable assault weapon designs that the Founding Fathers may  have known about were the Kalthoff breech-loading mechanisms and the 
Lorenzoni family of repeating flintlocks.
Chelembrom-Magazine-Repeating-Flintlock-1
A Chelembrom magazine repeating flintlock from 1781, a decade before the 2nd  amendment was written.
Variants of the Lorenzoni repeating system, an invention from 1688, were one  of several types of rapid-fire guns being produced in 1791. One of the finest  and rarest examples is the Chelembrom magazine repeating flintlock. Thought 
to be the creation of a French gunmaker working in India, few of these  innovative and complex Chelembrom guns survive to the present day.
Though employed primarily as hunting weapons, at least one of these repeaters  may have been used on the battlefield. As noted by the Royal Collection Trust  in the United Kingdom, at least one of these flintlock magazine guns was  acquired by the nemesis of Colonial America, King George III himself.
Chelembrom-Magazine-Repeating-Flintlock-1781
The Chelembrom magazine repeating flintlock, the 18th Century's AR-15.
Carrying 20 rounds, the Chelembron magazine-fed repeaters are flintlock  predecessors to the famous Henry repeating rifle but predates the Henry by  nearly 200 years. In Royal Sporting Guns at Windsor, the complicated 
operation of this system is described.
With the muzzle pointing upwards the barrel and its magazines are turned in a  clockwise direction. This movement leads to the following chain of events. A  charge of powder is measured into the dropping tube and a small portion is  deposited in the priming pan which is then closed and the lock cocked. The  rest of the powder falls into a chamber in the brass receiver. At the same  time a bullet is released and drops into a covered trough. The barrel is 
moved further round until it is opposite the bullet, which is thrust upwards  into the barrel by a plunger or spring. The gun is then reversed and the  barrel assembly turned back to its original position. The mouth of the barrel  with its seated bullet then lies opposite a chamber full of powder.
Because the powder magazine is away from the point of ignition, the system is  fairly safe compared to other repeating flintlock designs. Though far more  complicated to manufacture than the typical guns of the 18th century,  Chelembron repeating flintlocks offered a significantly higher firing rate  when they were properly maintained and operated.
The Lorenzoni Repeating Flintlock
Designed in 1688 by Michele Lorenzoni, an Italian gunmaker in Florence, the  Lorenzoni repeating flintlock was leagues ahead of its time. Among the most  well-known multi-shot guns that existed when the 2nd Amendment was written,  the Lorenzoni system, like the Chelembrom style featured above, was offered 
in both pistol and long gun variants that could be cocked and primed in a  single operation.
pair-of-silvermounted-lorenzoniberselli-system-flintlock-pistols
A pair of Lorenzoni flintlocks, another rapid-fire "assault weapon" of the  era.
The first Lorenzoni-style repeater that appeared in the American Colonies was  manufactured by London gunsmith John Cookston. A later smith, John Shaw,  relocated to Boston in 1750 and began producing and selling several repeating  flintlock variations for the American market that ranged from seven to twelve  shot magazines. Billed as John Shaw's Cookson Volitional Repeaters, Shaw  advertised his guns in the Boston Gazette, the most widely read newspaper in  18th Century America, making many early Americans very much aware of high  capacity repeating firearms.
Lorenzoni-Type-Lever-Action-Repeating-Flintlock-Rifle
A rare Lorenzoni type lever action repeating flintlock rifle, another  well-known repeating gun in 1791.
The Girandoni Repeating Air Rifle
Also predating the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the 1779 Girandoni  repeating air rifle used air reservoirs instead of gunpowder to fire up to 22  rounds per minute. A smokeless, breech-loaded, magazine-fed, comparatively  quiet gun that was lethal up to 150 yards, it's no wonder that Thomas  Jefferson later had one sent along with Lewis and Clark on their historic 
1803 expedition to explore the American West.
lewis-and-clark-air-gun-model
The Girandoni air rifle, the "scary black rifle" of its day. Numerous styles  of airguns existed when the 2nd amendment was written. This extremely rare  Austrian military Girardoni repeating air rifle example is of the exact kind  believed to have been carried on the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
The Girandoni repeating air rifle had already been in service with the  Austrian army for over a decade when the Second Amendment was written.  Numerous sporting variations were also manufactured, including this  lightweight example that was almost certainly intended for civilian use.
If the iron air reservoirs weren't so difficult to produce with the 
technology of the period, and Bartolomeo Girandoni and his competitors hadn't  kept the details of their inventions so guarded, the air rifle may have had a  more dramatic impact on the evolution of firearms.
Air guns are but a single example of repeating guns that existed when the 2nd  amendment was written.
The Belton Fusil and Superposed Flintlocks
The Belton "Roman candle" fusil is the first known repeating firearm invented  in American. Joseph Belton's repeating fusil design employed superimposed  loads that fired in succession after a single pull of the trigger using a  chained charge much like a Roman candle. Joseph Belton, an inventor and  gunsmith from Benjamin Franklin's hometown of Philadelphia, not only produced  his innovative firearm for the public, he petitioned the Continental Congress  during the American Revolution in hopes of a largescale military contract.
Belton-Style-Repeating-Four-Shot-Flintlock-Pistol
The Belton repeater, a high capacity assault flintlock studied by the  Continental Army.
In 1776, Belton wrote to Congress claiming he'd designed a way to make a  musket discharge up to eight rounds in three seconds. Benjamin Franklin wrote  to George Washington in support of the idea, and Washington initially  commissioned 100 of Belton's rapid-fire muskets for the Continental Army.
A disagreement over money ultimately canceled the proposal, as Belton was  convinced his invention was worth a far higher sum than the fledging American  government could afford. Belton continued to sell his guns to the public, and  his inquires with the Continental Congress have left a detailed written  account of how America's founders not only knew about repeating weapon  technology but debated financing its mass production.
Ellis-Jennings-Repeating-Flintlock-Rifle
The Ellis-Jennings repeating rifle, a successor to the Belton style "Roman  candle" repeater.
Belton's design was promising, and three decades after the ratification of 
the Bill of Rights, during the administration of Founding Father James 
Monroe, a wealthier United States government gave the technology a second  look. The Ellis-Jennings repeating rifle was created in variations that could  fire up to ten shots before reloading. Over 500 Ellis-Jennings four-shot  sliding lock repeaters were manufactured under contract with the U.S.  government at the cost of $13,090, a substantial purchase for the period that  demonstrated confidence in the technology.
The Chambers Swivel Gun: An Early American Flintlock Machine Gun
In late 1812, Revolutionary War veteran Joseph G. Chambers approached the  Department of War in Washington D.C. in regard to his repeating flintlock  rifle and pistol technology, referring to his inventions as "machine guns."  Like the Belton, the Chambers' design was based on a single trigger pull  setting off a succession of chained charges in sequence. War Secretary John  Armstrong was skeptical.
Chambers-flintlock-machine-gun
Only two examples of U.S. Navy Repeating Swivels remain today. The Chambers  gun could fire over 200 rounds in minutes. The image above is a reproduction.
Secretary of the Navy William Jones proved more receptive to the Chambers  flintlock machine gun and manufactured and ordered 10 swivel guns using the  design, as well as 100 muskets converted into Chambers repeaters. Many  additional orders soon followed.
On May 27th of 1814, Secretary Jones wrote to Commodore Isaac Chauncey,  informing him that he'd forwarded "a number of the repeating Swivels Muskets  and Pistols, with prepared ammunition and persons acquainted with the art of  preparing the ammunition and of loading the arms. . . . Two of those swivels  in each Top, to be fired in succession upon the decks of your adversary, 
would not fail to clear it entirely in five minutes."
Chambers-Flintlock-diagram
A Chambers flintlock diagram displayed at the Belgium Arms Museum at LiŠge.
The Puckle Gun
A unique flintlock machine gun prototype was concieved over 70 years prior to  the Second Amendment. Invented by James Puckle in 1718 as an anti-boarding  weapon for the British navy, the Puckle Gun used a pre-loaded revolving  cylinder that could fire nine shots per minute, more than three times faster  than the average period musket.
Puckle-Gun-1
A recreation of the Puckle gun. Photo courtesy of the Institute of Military  Technology.
Though in truth it was more of a repeating swivel gun than the early machine  gun sometimes portrayed, the Puckle Gun, or "Defense Gun" was designed with  both round and square-shaped bullets in mind. The later rounds were intended  for Ottoman Turks and their relentless raids along the Mediterranean  coastline. Though rejected by the British Navy and never produced beyond a 
few prototype pieces, the Puckle Gun was a clever piece of engineering for 
the time, and later attempts at tripod mounted repeating guns employed some 
of the same concepts.
Nock Volley Guns and the Duckfoot Pistol
Designed by James Wilson in 1779 and mass-produced by British gunsmith Henry  Nock, over 650 Nock seven-shot volley guns were shipped to the British Royal  Navy during the Revolutionary War.
These distinctive multi-barrel firearms were designed to deliver a tight  cluster of shots on a target at greater range and velocity than a shotgun or  blunderbuss. Even at a distance, such as firing at the deck of a passing 
enemy ship, Nock guns could still hit a small area and do more damage than a  single musket shot.
Seven-bore-Nock-Volley-Gun
"Talley ho, lads!" The Nock gun was the ultimate in 18th century home (and  naval) defense.
Nock Volley guns were used against the French fleet during the Battle of the  Saintes in 1782, a major British victory. They went on to enjoy a brief 
period of popularity as sporting guns in the early 19th Century as well,  including goose rifles that employed Joseph Manton's patented tubelock firing  mechanism.
The Nock gun's menacing look and ability to deliver a more accurate cluster  shot has earned them roles in movie and television history including The  Alamo, Sharpe, Turn: Washington's Spies, Master & Commander, and more.
The Nock Volley gun. More range than a blunderbuss, more lethal than a 
musket.
Based on multi-barrel volley cannons that have existed since the renaissance,  the Duckfoot pistol was about riot control and close-quarters combat. The  multiple barrels radiated from the single lock resembled a duck's foot, 
giving this early "assault weapon" its popular name. Why fire one shot when  you can unload four, five, or six simultaneously?
An-Organ-gun-compared-to-a-Duckfoot-pistol
A sketch of the Organ gun (top) and a duck foot pistol (bottom), a  miniaturized flintlock version of the same concept with similarly splayed  barrels.
The Ferguson Rifle and Early Breechloaders
British Captain Patrick Ferguson loved guns and military strategy, and the  breech loading rifle he invented in 1774 was produced just in time to unleash  his new weapon on the rebellious American colonists. Breech-loading guns were  faster than muzzle-loaders, offered the ability to reload from the prone  position without breaking cover, and could be reloaded on the move.
Ferguson's rifle was also more effective in damp conditions compared to other  flintlocks of the era, and the bold Scottsman was eager to test his new 
weapon on the battlefield in an effort to "counteract the superiority as  marksmen of the American backwoodsmen."
Innovative for its time, the Ferguson rifle is considered by many to be the  king of early breechloaders.
Ferguson was granted a patent in 1776, and the following year the captain was  placed in command of a rifle corps equipped with his secret weapons. 200  Ferguson rifles saw action in the Revolutionary War, including at the Battle  of Brandywine and later at the Battle of Kings Mountain, where Ferguson was  surrounded and killed. Though four times more costly to produce than a  muzzle-loader, Ferguson's rifle demonstrated the clear advantages of the  breech-loading design.
Ferguson-patent-breechloading-flintlock-rifle-2
The Ferguson went head-to-head with the American Long Rifle during the  Revolution.
In the following decades, other gunmakers experimented with the 
breech-loading flintlock, but it wasn't until 1816 that the United States  government purchased them in large numbers. President James Madison, the  "Father of the Constitution", saw the importance of equipping the American  military with the latest innovations.
Maine gunmaker John H. Hall furnished 100 of his patented breechloaders, and  two years later the  Hall Model 1819 became the first breech loader to be  regularly adopted by a military, as well as the world's first military rifle  designed with completely interchangeable parts. The industrial revolution had  arrived, and firearms technology would never look back.
Highly-rare-documented-Hall-Model-1817-breech-loading-flintlock-rifle-with-bay  onet-one-of-the-original-100
Highly rare, documented Hall Model 1817 breech-loading flintlock rifle with  bayonet, one of the original 100.
Swivel Breech Guns
While one of the more common solutions to getting multiple shots out of a  muzzleloading firearm was to simply add another barrel, that generally  required also fitting a second lock and getting everything installed in such 
a manner that the locks could work independently of one another to fire the  appropriate barrels and triggers setup to fire each lock.
LAZARI-COMINAZ-Marked-Italian-Over-Under-Wheellock-Pistol
This "LAZARI COMINAZ" marked Italian over/under Wheellock pistol is an  extremely rare and unusual way to get multiple shots of a single firearm.  Instead of revolving, this pistol is built essentially like one pistol with a  second pistol installed upside down on top.
Good locks weren't cheap, so one popular solution, especially in the 
flintlock and percussion eras, was to use two barrels that could be rotated 
to switch for a second shot and then one lock. These guns still needed to 
have two sets of the priming portions of the mechanisms fitted to the 
barrels. Such firearms are called swivel breeches or "wenders" (meaning  "turner" in German). They were commonly sporting guns and pistols rather than  standard military issue firearms, but some may have been used by military  officers.
Engraved-Philippe-De-Sellier-Wender-Flintlock-Sporting-Gun
An early 18th-century "wender" by Philippe De Sellier of Liege (active c.  1676-1740). Note that each barrel has flashpan, frizzen, and frizzen spring.
Matchlock and Flintlock Revolvers
Firearms employing revolving cylinder systems were known since at least the  seventieth century and likely well before, as indicated by multiple surviving  examples. Matchlock and Flintlock revolvers were an established technology  when the 2nd Amendment was written, though metallurgy hadn't caught up with  the ambitious design enough to allow wide scale production.
Matchlock-revolver
A four-shot revolving matchlock musket sold by Rock Island Auction back in  2013.
There were also multi-shot flintlocks with revolving chambers. Many of the  examples we see today came from the gunmakers of Carlsbad, Bohemia, in the  18th century. The Carlsbad gunsmiths produced some very fine examples of 
three and four-shot revolving flintlock pistols and sporting guns, but the  system remained rarely used and limited to the armories of the nobility 
rather than a weapon adopted widely for the military or common people. The  revolving flintlock design is similar to swivel breech guns, but with only 
the breech sections of each barrel and then a single barrel they line up with  instead.
Three-Shot-Flintlock-Revolving-Sporting-Gun
This 18th-century three-shot revolving flintlock sporting gun uses a similar  design as the matchlock before it. Because it is a flintlock, it's more  complicated to make than the matchlock but would also be more reliable. To  solve the issue of priming for multiple shots, this design has a separate pan  and frizzen for each chamber. They are all fired by a single lock.
English inventor Elisha Collier developed one of the most famous designs for 
a flintlock revolver in 1814, and thousands were produced for the British  Empire in the following years. His business partner, Artemas Wheeler of  Concord, Massachusetts, patented the design in America, and Collier began  marketing rifle and shotgun versions of his cylinder system to sportsmen and  pitching the revolving pistols variants as an option for self-defense. Though  Collier's improved design came to market after the Second Amendment, the  revolver concept had been produced for centuries prior.
Revolving-rifles-and-shotguns-this-August
The Collier was one of many revolving rifle models invented in the early  decades of the 19th century.
Own a Musket for Home Defense: The Second Amendment Meme
Four ruffians break into my house. "What the devil?" As I grab my powdered 
wig and Kentucky rifle. Blow a golf ball-sized hole through the first man,  he's dead on the spot. Draw my pistol on the second man, miss him entirely  because it's smoothbore and nail the neighbor's dog. I have to resort to the  cannon mounted at the top of the stairs loaded with grapeshot. "Talley ho  lads!"
Fix bayonet and charge the last terrified rapscallion. Should've used a Nock  Volley gun!
We've all heard a variant of the 2nd Amendment musket meme. It's a fun bit of  humor, and certainly a clever way to illustrate how different guns were in  1776 compared to today, but one need only study examples of repeating 
firearms available when the American Constitution was written, such as the  Girandoni air rifle, the Cookston repeater, and the Belton flintlock to  understand the reality was far more complex.
America's Founding Fathers knew of repeating guns, hoped to produce them for  Washington's Army, and saw them improve and evolve during their lifetimes. 
And yet the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was not written with 
any exclusion, or mention of single-shot muskets, repeaters, cannons, war  ships, or "assault weapons."
A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, 
the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
No asterisks, no limitations. Seems pretty clear.
m240-Bravo-Machine-Gun-for-sale
A Fabrique Nationale U.S. M240B "Bravo" belt-fed machine gun, just as the  Founding Fathers intended.
Firearms Evolution
Rock Island Auction Company's Premier Auctions are packed with a wealth of  scarce historical firearms, rarely seen prototypes, and unusual gun variants  that demonstrate just how innovative our forefathers were when it came to new  weapon designs. So while the guns of 1776 vs today are clearly not 
comparable, and America's Founders probably couldn't envision a Colt  AR-15/XM16E1 machine gun, they also wouldn't have been surprised at the  continuing evolution of firearms technology that they witnessed numerous 
times firsthand.
When it came to producing more firepower in the 16th - 19th centuries, all  ideas were on the table. Two notions that appeared in numerous forms were  superposed loads and the use of multiple barrels.
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