Volcanic Repeating Pistol

The Volcanic was not the first repeating pistol, but it was an early one of the first in a line of firearms that would develop into the iconic lever action rifles of the American West. Patented in 1854, the Volcanic used a toggle-action lock operated by a finger lever – simply a smaller version of the hand lever used in the later rifles. The Volcanic had a tube magazine beneath its barrel to hold 7 rounds, and fired a conical bullet in which the powder and primer were both contained within the hollow base of the bullet.

The Volcanic never really caught on very well primarily because of its ammunition. The limited powder capacity of the design meant that the cartridge was fairly weak (in the .41 caliber, it pushed a 106gr bullet at about 500-600 fps), and it was not particularly reliable either. The Volcanic Arms Company went bankrupt in 1857, and was bought up by Winchester. Winchester would continue to produce Volcanic pistols for several more years, and in 1860 put into the market the Henry rifle, which used the basic Volcanic mechanism but with the much more potent (although still relatively weak) .44 rimfire cartridge.

3 thoughts on “Volcanic Repeating Pistol

  1. Brad says:

    Just a quick little edit to your article, Volcanic (founded by none other than Horace Smith and Daniel B. Wesson) Rifles became Henry Rifles (B. Tyler Henry was plant superintendent at Volcanic) and made the famous 1860 Henry Rifle, which then later was bought by Winchester (not right away in 1857 as you wrote) and they came out with the 1866 (the famous “Yellow Boy”

    • Jess Willard says:

      Hi Noah,

      Denix unfortunately discontinued their version a few years ago (we found 8 or 9 out of 10 would have issues with the cocking mechanism). Hopefully one day they resurrect this one – very nice piece! Airsoft would likely be the only ‘shooting’ possibility out there, though I’ve yet to see Airsoft do one of these. Ultimately an original would be one option, but with that being collectible (and old) shooting one could be expensive (and dangerous depending on its condition). Would be a great time to shoot though! Cheers, Jess

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *