Wallaceburg is the home of the first
Lee-Enfield Rifle ever made ... the river front echoed the very first test
shot of this repeater rifle as it whistled clear across the river and into
an oak tree. A plaque in Municipal Park now marks this 1878 event and the
museum houses this important military artifact.
This world famous forebearer of the
modern repeater rifle was invented by a native of Hawick, Roxburgh,
Scotland. He was born on August 28, 1831, the son of a prominent watchmaker.
When the family first immigrated to Canada, they lived in Galt, but later
moved to Chatham, where Lee's father opened a jeweller's shop. At age 7,
James got a job in this shop and first started to experiment with firearms,
and in 1850 James opened his shop. By 1862, he had patented his first rifle
-- a single shot, breech loading rifle. The U.S. War Department ordered 1000
of these, but misunderstanding about the calibre led to cancellation of the
order. Lee claimed damages from the government, but was forced to close his
shop.
It was in 1878, when James made his greatest contribution. He invented
a rifle with a box magazine capable of firing 30 shots per minute. The rifle
was perfected in Wallaceburg on a site opposite the Municipal Building. The
gun was tested successfully in Wallaceburg. Bullets were fired from the Lee
Brothers Foundry across the Sydenham River into an oak tree hundreds of
yards away.
Ten thousand of these rifles were sold to the U.S. Navy and they also became
the standard issue for the British Army for over 60 years. The Patent rights
were purchased by England for 50,000 pounds plus 50 cents for each magazine.
The rifle was produced in Enfield, England in 1888, thus the "Lee Enfield"
name.