Driggs-Seabury

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Driggs-Seabury Ordnance Company
Industry Artillery, Automotive
Fate Dissolved 1925
Founded circa 1898
Founder
  • William H. Driggs
  • Samuel Seabury
Key people
  • William H. Driggs
  • Samuel Seabury
  • Louis Labodie "L. L." Driggs
Products Naval artillery, Army artillery, motor vehicles

Driggs-Seabury Ordnance Company was founded by William H. Driggs and Samuel Seabury, both US Navy officers, circa 1898, originally to produce guns for the US Army and US Navy designed by the partners. Driggs-Seabury was preceded by the Driggs-Schroeder series of weapons, designed by Driggs and Seaton Schroeder in the late 1880s and produced by the American Ordnance Company in the 1890s. Although Seabury died in 1902, followed by Driggs in 1908, the company continued under the leadership of Louis Labodie "L. L." Driggs until 1925. The company manufactured motor vehicles 1913-15 and 1921-25, but sold its weapons production and plant in Sharon, Pennsylvania to Savage Arms in a 1915 merger.[1][2][3] Under Savage Arms, the Sharon plant made Lewis guns in World War I. Dropping the Seabury name, Driggs was reconstituted as a motor vehicle manufacturer in New Haven, Connecticut in 1921, confusingly named “Driggs Ordnance & Manufacturing Corporation”. Driggs folded for good in 1925.

Weapons

Weapons produced by Driggs-Seabury included:

File:M1903 3 inch Gun.png
A 3-inch gun M1903, generally similar to the Driggs-Seabury M1898.
  • 3-inch gun M1898 (aka 15-pounder),[4] a coast defense weapon for the Army on a retractable "masking parapet" carriage, also made by Driggs-Seabury. 120 guns and carriages were built. It was later used as the basis for the 3-inch Gun M1918, an anti-aircraft weapon. Possibly due to the bankruptcy of Driggs-Seabury, the M1898 seacoast weapons were removed from service in the early 1920s.[5]
  • US Navy 3"/23 caliber gun Mark 13 during World War I. This had a semi-automatic horizontal sliding breech block. In this case semi-automatic means the breech opens and the cartridge case is ejected on firing, ready for the next round to be loaded manually.[6]
A Hotchkiss 6-pounder gun on USS Oregon (BB-3), generally similar to the Driggs-Seabury 6-pounder.
  • The Navy 6-pounder Mark 11 and 3-pounder Mark 14 were made by Driggs-Seabury.[7]
  • Two 6-pounder Driggs-Seabury guns were adopted by the US Army and designated the M1898 and M1900.[8] References to Marks II and III Driggs-Seabury weapons appear to describe earlier Driggs-Schroeder weapons manufactured by American Ordnance, possibly similar to the Navy Marks 6 and 8.[9][10] Some of these weapons were used at coastal forts in limited quantities around 1900, and 12 were at Fort Ruger, Oahu, Hawaii 1915-19 under the Land Defense Project on "parapet" or "rampart" mounts which allowed a wheeled carriage to be fixed to a pintle mount.[11]
  • A 3.2-inch field gun, possibly the M1897 or an unsuccessful bid.[12][13][14]
  • The breech mechanism for the US Navy 3"/50 caliber gun Mark 5.[15]

Vehicles

The vehicles produced by Driggs-Seabury and Driggs (some of which were other manufacturers' designs) included:

References

External links

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