Confederate States Arms & Weapons

The Confederate States relied on imported British arms, captured Union weapons, and domestic manufacture to arm forces that were often outproduced but not outfought in the American Civil War.

Confederate States Arms & Weapons

Overview

The Confederate States of America (1861–1865) faced the fundamental challenge of fighting an industrialized war with a largely agrarian economy. The Confederacy imported weapons from Britain and Europe, manufactured arms in Richmond and other centers, captured enormous quantities of Union weapons, and improvised when none of the above were sufficient.

Small Arms

Rifles and Muskets

  • Enfield Pattern 1853 rifle musket — The most important Confederate long arm; .577 caliber; imported in large numbers from Britain through the blockade; highly regarded for its accuracy and reliability
  • Springfield Model 1861 (captured) — Identical in caliber (.58) to the Enfield; Confederate forces captured and reissued thousands
  • Richmond Rifle Musket — A Confederate-manufactured copy of the US Model 1855/61; produced at Richmond Armory using machinery captured from Harpers Ferry
  • Fayetteville Rifle — Confederate-made rifle using captured Harpers Ferry machinery
  • Cook & Brother rifles and muskets — Georgia and later North Carolina manufacturer; produced both rifle muskets and shorter artillery carbines
  • Austrian Lorenz rifle — Imported in large numbers; some chambered in different calibers caused supply complications

Edged Weapons

The Bowie knife became emblematic of Confederate soldiers, with many arriving carrying large sheath knives. Officers carried swords — often straight cavalry sabers or naval cutlasses. Confederate sword manufacturing was limited; many carried imported British or pre-war American swords.

Cavalry Arms

Confederate cavalry was often better mounted than Union counterparts in the early war. Standard arms included:

  • Cavalry sabers (though many Confederate troopers preferred pistols and carbines to swords)
  • Colt revolvers (pre-war stock and captured examples)
  • Sharps and other carbines (mostly captured)
  • LeMat revolver — A distinctive Confederate-favored weapon with a 9-round cylinder above a single-shot 20-gauge shotgun barrel

Artillery

The Confederacy cast bronze and iron cannon at Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond and other facilities. Confederate artillery was qualitatively comparable to Union guns but increasingly outmatched in quantity. Captured Union artillery was routinely pressed into Confederate service.


This article is a stub. Contributions covering specific weapons, battles, and Confederate manufacturing are welcome.

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