The Snider first saw action with the British/Indian Army at the
battle of Magdala (Aroghee) in
Ethiopia on 10 April 1868, against the forces of
Tewodros II of Ethiopia; during the battle the
4th (King's Own) Regiment of Foot alone fired 10,200 rounds. The Snider–Enfield served throughout the
British Empire, including
Cape Colony, India, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, until its gradual phaseout by the
Martini–Henry, beginning in 1871–1880. Volunteer and militia forces continued to use it until the late 1880s. It stayed in service with the Indian Army until the mid-1890s, because between the
Indian Rebellion of 1857 and 1905 the British kept the Indian Army one weapon generation behind British units. The Hunza Scouts may have been the last to use it in action (in the carbine version), in the Chitral campaign of 1895. The Indian units received the Martini–Henry when the British adopted the
Lee–Metford. The
Ijeshas used large numbers of Snider–Enfields against
Ibadan during the 16-year-long Yoruba Civil War (1877 to 1893).
Frank Richards, who served on the Northwest Frontier between 1902 and 1908, records in
Old Soldier Sahib that the British army still used Sniders during that period. Sentries on night duty in camps and cantonments would carry a Snider and
buckshot cartridges. Should tribesmen try to get into the camp to steal rifles, the buckshot would give the sentries a better chance of hitting the thief, and unlike a .303 round, would be less likely to wound or kill a comrade should the sentry miss. The Snider was notably powerful.
Rudyard Kipling gave a graphic depiction of its effect in his poem, "The Grave of the Hundred Head": A Snider squibbed in the jungle— Somebody laughed and fled, And the men of the First Shikaris Picked up their Subaltern dead, With a big blue mark in his forehead And the back blown out of his head. In 1869, the Ottoman government began procuring American Civil War surplus Enfield and Springfield muskets, as well as from Belgium, Austria, England & France in order to have them converted to the Snider "Polivache" system. This differed in that the locking latch on the breechblock was pivoted up to unlock, rather than pressed in like on the MkIII. These were converted in Belgium and at the
Tophane-i Amire arsenal. At the start of the Russo-Turkish War, the majority of the Ottoman military was armed with a Snider rifle. As the Ottomans upgraded, the Sniders got pushed further into rural areas, such as Yemen. Some less well-equipped Portuguese units deployed in the
Niassa Province, in northern Mozambique, were still using this rifle during
World War I. ==Variants==