testtest

Cartridge of the Week - The .44-40 Winchester

Talyn

SAINT
Founding Member
The .44-40 Winchester
1625421789838.png

The .44-40 Winchester, also known as .44 Winchester, .44 WCF (Winchester Center Fire), and .44 Largo (in Spanish-speaking countries) was introduced in 1873 by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. It was the first metallic centerfire cartridge manufactured by Winchester, and was promoted as the standard chambering for the new Winchester Model 1873 rifle. As both a rifle and a handgun caliber, the cartridge soon became widely popular, so much so that the Winchester Model 1873 rifle became known as "The gun that won the West."

When Winchester released the new cartridge, many other firearm companies chambered their guns in the new round. Remington and Marlin released their own rifles and pistols which chambered the round, Colt offered an alternative chambering in its popular Single Action Army revolver in a model known as the Colt Frontier Six-Shooter, and Smith & Wesson began releasing their Smith & Wesson New Model 3 chambered in .44-40.

Settlers, lawmen, and cowboys appreciated the convenience of being able to carry a single caliber of ammunition which they could fire in both pistol and rifle. In both law enforcement and hunting usage, the .44-40 became the most popular cartridge in the United States, and to this day has the reputation of killing more deer than any other save the .30-30 Winchester.

The cartridge was originally sold as .44 Winchester. When the Union Metallic Cartridge Co. (UMC) began selling their own version of the cartridge, it adopted the name .44-40 (shorthand for .44 caliber and the standard load at the time of 40-grain of black powder), as it did not want to offer free advertising for one of its competitors. Over time, the name stuck, and eventually Winchester adopted the .44-40 designation for the round after World War II. Winchester uses the designation "44-40 Winchester" on packaging.

The initial standard load for the cartridge was 40 grains of black powder propelling a 200-grain round-nose, flat-point bullet at roughly 1,245 ft/s. Winchester catalogues listed velocities of 1,300 ft/s by 1875. In 1886, UMC also began offering a slightly heavier, 217-grain, bullet at 1,190 ft/s, also with 40 gr of black powder. Winchester soon began to carry the 217-gr loading, as well, but in 1905, UMC discontinued the heavier load. In 1895, Winchester introduced a 200-grain cartridge bulk loaded with 17-grain of DuPont No. 2 smokeless powder and a bullet for 1,300 ft/s, and in 1896, UMC followed suit with a 217-gr bullet at 1,235 ft/s.

Soon, both companies were offering the cartridge with lead "metal patched" (i.e. copper-jacketed with lead points), and full metal jacket versions. Taking advantage of the stronger-action designs of the Winchester model 1892 and the Marlin 1894 lever-action rifles, in 1903, Winchester began offering a higher-performance version of the loading called the Winchester High Velocity (WHV), with a velocity of 1,540 ft/s using a 200-gr copper-jacketed bullet from a 24-inch barrel length, UMC and Peters Cartridge Company soon introduced equivalents.

Over the years, a number of different bullet weights and styles have been offered, including 122, 140, 160, 165, 166, 180, and 217 gr in lead, soft- and hollow-point, full metal case, blanks, and shot shells. The most common current loading is a 200-gr bullet at 1190 ft/s. By 1942, more modern cartridges had all but eclipsed the .44-40, but it regained some popularity in the 1950s and 1960s when Colt began once again to manufacture the Single Action Army and Frontier. More recently, the .44-40 has had a resurgence due to the popularity of metallic silhouette and cowboy action shooting, which inspired the introduction of a low-velocity 225-grain gallery load, the heaviest factory bullet ever available for the cartridge.
 
Good read Tayln!!!!!

The first packaging of the 44-40 cartridges by Winchester were designated "44/100", just like the 44 Henry. Note the primer on the cartridge pic has a dimple. This is because the very first cartridges were not as they are today and very short lived. They were initially primed with the Milbank primers. They were not reliable and Winchester held their first order shipments until the newer cartridges were released.
EmbeddedImage (3).jpg


Winchester's second box label (1874 to 1977) does not show the caliber on the top label, only on the end, of which was seen as "44 Winchester Model 1873'".

EmbeddedImage (4).jpg



By 1894, at the request of Marlin, UMC (Union Metallic Cartridge Company) changed the designation to 44-40...and by 1900 that designation was used by Winchester as well, however, Remington used the designation 44 Winchester (44-40) on their box tops well into the 1960's.

Several cartridge companies, to include UMC/Remington, noted several "44-40" designations on their ammo boxes and or advertisements.

An 1887's end box label shows the designation
".44-40 W.C.F. for Winchester Rifles"

UMC's 1896 catalog shows the cartridge picture for the following,
44-40-217 Marlin Safety
44 Cal. Colt's New Lightning Magazine Rifle
44 Winchester Model 1873


UMC's 1901 catalog shows the following
44 Short
44 Long
44 Henry, Flat
44 Flat, Pointed
44 W and C
44 Howard, Long

UMC's 1904 catalog shows the following designations
.44 Winchester
.44 Colt's M.R.
.44-40 Marlin

A 1930 to 1933 box shows ".44 Winchester Marlin and Remington"

 
The attached picture is of a Colt 44-40 Single Action Army passed down from my Grandfather. He traded a fiddle and a plug of tobacco for it around 1900. He went on to do trick shooting with it after he and a friend were barred from turkey shoots as they kept winning them. :) They would shoot coins from between each other's thumb and finger or shoot cigars out of each others mouths. (Sorry but I don't trust anyone's shooting that much.) He also worked cattle ranches in Wyoming, Montana and North & South Dakota and burned the brands on the ivory grips on the Old Colt.
 

Attachments

  • Colt Ivory Grip.jpg
    Colt Ivory Grip.jpg
    1.2 MB · Views: 194
  • Colt and holster.jpg
    Colt and holster.jpg
    1.3 MB · Views: 416
Back
Top