The Farquharson Rifle is a single-shot hammerless falling-block action rifle designed and patented by John Farquharson (1833-1893),[1] of Daldhu, Scotland in 1872. George Gibbs, a gun maker in Bristol, became a co-owner of the Farquharson patent in 1875 and was the sole maker of Farquharson rifles until the patent expired.[2]: 97  Less than 1,000 Gibbs-Farquharson rifles have been manufactured, the last rifle was delivered in 1910.[2]: 140 

Farquharson Rifle
TypeRifle
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Production history
DesignerJohn Farquharson
Designed1872
ManufacturerGibbs, Jeffery, among many others
ProducedGibbs models: 1872–1910
Public Domain "PD" models: 1895–1927
Specifications
CartridgeVarious
ActionFalling-block action
Feed system1-round

A few years after the original Farquharson patent expired in 1889, many English gun makers began producing their own versions of Farquharson rifles utilizing actions made by Auguste Francotte in Herstal, Belgium.[2]: 317  These actions were essentially exact copies of those used by Gibbs to build his military target Farquharson rifles, which had a solid combined lower tang and trigger guard.[2]: 126, 313  The actions had "PD" stamped on the receiver, which stood for "public domain," indicating there was no patent infringement in utilizing the design.[2]: 126, 313  W. J. Jeffery & Co. produced most of the "PD" Farquharson rifles, with the first ones being sold in 1895 as their Model 95 Falling Block Rifle. In 1904 Jefferey introduced a larger version of this action called the Model 1904 and chambered in the 600 Nitro Express.[2]: 318  The Model 95 and Model 1904 were listed in the Jeffery catalogs right up until 1927.[2]: 318  However, beginning in 1912 the advertisements for the falling-block rifles carried the notation "Now made to order only, having been superseded by the Magazine Rifle."[2]: 320 

Frederick Courteney Selous, was a British explorer, officer, hunter, and conservationist, famous for his exploits in south and east of Africa. Selous used a .461 Gibbs Farquharson for much of his African hunting. This is a photo of him on African safari, with two shot Kori bustards and his Holland & Holland Woodward patent rifle. Circa 1890s

Legacy

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Because of its rarity, the original Gibbs-Farquharson rifles are highly prized collector pieces today. The public domain "PD" Farquharson rifles made by other companies are less rare, but are still generally considered collector pieces rather than working firearms.[3]

Ruger introduced their No.1 single-shot falling-block rifle in 1967,[4] a design loosely styled after the Farquharson rifles, and it remains one of their best selling firearms.[5]

Several other gunmakers offering bespoke single-shot rifles more or less based on the Farquharson, including Soroka Rifle Co. in New Zealand, Dakota Arms Inc. in Sturgis, South Dakota, US and Sturtevant Arms Company in Pueblo, Colorado, US.[6][7]

References

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  1. ^ Branch, J. C. (2016, July 21). Farquharson by Soroka Rifle Company. Revivaler. https://revivaler.com/farquharson-soroka-rifle-company/
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Kirton, Jonathan: The British Falling Block Breechloading Rifle From 1865 (1997).
  3. ^ Farquharson rifle. Farquharson Rifle - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games. (n.d.). https://www.imfdb.org/wiki/Farquharson_Rifle
  4. ^ Ruger No. 1 press release at http://www.ruger.com/
  5. ^ Falling block action. (n.d.). https://chuckhawks.com/falling_block_action.htm
  6. ^ JimC. (2022, June 15). Rigby Farquharson. Frontier Partisans. https://frontierpartisans.com/25990/rigby-farquharson/
  7. ^ Record of work: Jeffery Model 1895 falling block action #13106. W J Jeffrey  No. (n.d.). https://www.hallowellco.com/jeffrey%20farquharson%20450-400%203-inch%20nitro.htm
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