Following the success of the Model 1870, the
Governor of New York ordered 15,000 Remington rifles and bayonets for his state's
militia. These Model 1871 rifles were very similar to the Model 1870 rifles, but differed in some details. Field experience with the Model 1870 showed that the mechanism jammed too easily in dusty conditions. Users also did not like loading the weapon at full cock. The Model 1871 included a locking bolt in the breech mechanism. The user pulled the
hammer to the full cock position, retracted the
breechblock spur to expose the chamber, and inserted the cartridge. When the breechblock closed, the hammer automatically fell to the half cock position, and the weapon could not be fired until the hammer was once again pulled to the full cock position. Over 20,000 Model 1871 rifles were eventually purchased by the state of
New York. The
U.S. Army did not greet the Remington rifles with much enthusiasm, despite its superiority to the standard-issue
Springfield Model 1870. Foreign sales of the weapon were much more successful.
Denmark ordered many of the Model 1870 and Model 1871 rifles. In 1873,
Spain ordered 50,000 Model 1871 rifles, which were delivered in 1875. Numerous other countries, such as
France,
Greece,
Chile,
Argentina,
Cuba, and
Puerto Rico also purchased this rifle. ==Notes==