I am not a sword collector per se so I have very few reference books on the subject.
From researching firearms of this period I encounter material on other arms and I note that there were a few 'stand out' brief spates of concentrating on making arms for the Coast Guard and, as well as Muskets, carbines and pistols, swords/cutlasses were also included.
There were 1500 'cutlasses' to be made at Enfield in 1831, with some urgency (WO 47/2702, 21 Mar). At this time there were also a lot of pistols made for that service, P/1833 Coast Guard Pistols.
Next notable orders were 1000 x short flintlock muskets made in 1844, the P/1844 Coast Guard Muskets - the last Ordnance made flintlock muskets. In that same year 800 Coast Guard Swords were ordered to be mounted at Enfield from blades already in stock. The other materials for those were malleable cast iron grips from Thomas Clive, the grips Japanned by Charles Dunn & the brass guards were from Samuel Hargroves (WO47 1992-2027, 13 Mar).
Note that in this period the nomenclature was very 'loose', with 'sea service sword', 'cutlass' and 'sword' being used sometimes for the same weapon. Just as for land service 'scimitar' had been used fairly regularly for the P/1797 Light Cavalry Sword, and other cavalry swords etc.
Do modern sword reference books describe the two orders (1831 & 1844) of Coast Guard swords/cutlasses? And if so are they all the same, or are there small differences?
Are the blades of the Coast Guard swords/cutlasses made from altered P/1797 Light Cavalry Sword blades?
Last edited by adrian; 18th December 2024 at 01:28 AM.
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