Muzzleloading, reloading, hunting and shooting
Rubber arsenal label printing plate (stamp) for St. Louis Arsenal .58 cal rifle musket cartridge bundle, 1864
Rubber arsenal label printing plate (stamp) for St. Louis Arsenal .58 cal rifle musket cartridge bundle, 1864

16.4 

Rubber arsenal label printing plate (stamp) for St. Louis Arsenal .58 cal rifle musket cartridge bundle, 1864

Rubber arsenal label printing plate (stamp) for St. Louis Arsenal .58 cal rifle musket cartridge bundle, 1864

Item number: CCL17
Out of stock

Out of stock

16.4 

More details

The St. Louis Arsenal in Missouri was established by the U.S. Government in 1827. By the end of the 1840s 22 buildings were serving the U.S. Army. This Arsenal was rather an assembly plant, not a manufacturing arsenal. During the Mexican War it played a key role in equipping the U.S. forces. During the Civil War St. Louis Arsenal remained in Union hands and served the U.S. Army through out the war supplying mainly the Armies of the Western theatre of war. This label can be found on standard cartridge bundles made according to the Ordnance Manual of 1861 holding 10 American-style Minié-Burton ball cartridges with an approximate length of 2.3-2.5”.

Please note that you are solely purchasing the rubber plate, no other accessories are shipped in the package, except for this manual of instructions.

Instructions on making bundles

Tools you will need: scissors, white string, off-white craft paper, folding box, .54 cal wooden dowel for making cartridges, ink stamp pad, stamping ink

  1. Cut the paper sheets.
Wrapper size Bundle size
Length (inch) Width (inch) Length (inch) Width (inch) Depth (inch)
.69 Musket Minié 10 8 2,5 3,4 1,45
. 58 Musket and rifle Minié 9 6,5 2,6 2,9 1,15
.69 Round ball 9 6,5 2,6 3,1 1,35
.69 Buck n’ ball 9 6,5 3,1 3,1 1,35
.54 Sharps 10 6,8 2,6 2,5 1,1

Theoretically the expanding ball .69 cal musket and .58 cal rifle and rifle musket cartridges had ordinary colour wrappers, the .58 cal cadet rifle shooting a lighter recoil cartridge with decreased powder charge and bullet wait had red colour wrapper, the .69 cal ball cartridges wrappers were supposed to be of green colour, while the buckshot cartridge wrappers were supposed to be red again. In practice these colour codes were seldom used during the conflict, therefore the labels and images of the wrappers were the key information source in differentiating the various cartridge bundles.

  1. Make the folding box by nailing two strips of wood to a 10×8” wooden plank. The length of the wooden strip is 2.6”, the distance between them is 5 times the diameter of the ball, their height is two times the diameter of the ball.

  1. Attach the rubber stamp to an appropriate size of wood with surface sanded smooth. Use double sided tape to attach the stamp.
  2. Apply ink to the stamp using the ink pad saturated with the desired colour (black or red) ink. Be sure that the complete surface is covered. Place the paper sheet on a semi hard surface (like 10 sheets of paper), and gently press the stamp on the paper. Experiment with different inks, pressure and paper quality to get the best result.
  3. Place the wrapper paper in the centre of the folding box, with the short sides towards the two sides of the box.
  4. Please 10 cartridges parallel with the sides of the box on the wrapper in two tiers with balls alternating.
  5. Roll a cartridge trapezoid on the .54 cal wooden former, choke and tie on one end, add 12 or 13 (late C.S.) percussion caps, and fold the tail. Insert the cap’s package in the opening of the cartridge bundle.
  6. Bring the two short sides of the paper together, and fold the sides like you were wrapping a gift box. Do not make perfect edges, but the bundle has to be stiff.
  7. Tie the bundle, first in the direction of the length, then its breadth, with the twine fastened in a single bow-knot.
  8. Enjoy your excellent cartridge bundle creating according to the original method using a Capandball Arsenal label stamp.
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