Old Musketry Targets
Moderator: joseyclosey
- Brian the Brit
- Contributing Member
- Posts: 108
- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 8:15 pm
- Location: Dorset, England
Old Musketry Targets
At our club committee meeting last night we discussed suggestions as to how we might inject new life into our currently rather tired round of rifle competitions.
As we have quite a few military rifle enthusiasts and access to a military range with firing points at 100, 200, 300 and 400 yards, I suggested a possible competition using the old School of Musketry (1910?)targets. I was thinking about the 'landscape' target that I've shot at on occasions at Bisley that has sand, pale blue and black horizontal triangles and also the stylised 'kneeling man' etc.
Can anyone tell me where I can obtain information about the dimensions and colours used so that I can look into reproducing some suitable boards? I've seen them somewhere in my surfing but can't find them now that I need them.
I've just found details of the 'new' 1938 Bisley landscape target in Barlow, J.A. (1951)'The Elements of Rifle Shooting' but the author makes no reference to other contemporary targets. This target has a white top section and sand-coloured main body with two dark brown and one grey horizontal triangles and is exactly the sort of thing that I'm looking for.
I'd appreciate any help.
Brian
As we have quite a few military rifle enthusiasts and access to a military range with firing points at 100, 200, 300 and 400 yards, I suggested a possible competition using the old School of Musketry (1910?)targets. I was thinking about the 'landscape' target that I've shot at on occasions at Bisley that has sand, pale blue and black horizontal triangles and also the stylised 'kneeling man' etc.
Can anyone tell me where I can obtain information about the dimensions and colours used so that I can look into reproducing some suitable boards? I've seen them somewhere in my surfing but can't find them now that I need them.
I've just found details of the 'new' 1938 Bisley landscape target in Barlow, J.A. (1951)'The Elements of Rifle Shooting' but the author makes no reference to other contemporary targets. This target has a white top section and sand-coloured main body with two dark brown and one grey horizontal triangles and is exactly the sort of thing that I'm looking for.
I'd appreciate any help.
Brian
- Strangely_Brown
- Regular visitor
- Posts: 84
- Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 9:10 am
- Location: UK
Musketry Targets
Brian, one of the plus points of LERA membership is the summer .22 league and Methuen events that are shot on historic landscape and figure targets.
Try the link on this page:
http://milsurpafterhours.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=2180
Try the link on this page:
http://milsurpafterhours.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=2180
Mick
- Strangely_Brown
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- Location: UK
- Brian the Brit
- Contributing Member
- Posts: 108
- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 8:15 pm
- Location: Dorset, England
Musketry Targets
Thanks, Guys!
I knew I'd seen that excellent thread somewhere. Doh!
That should give me lots of material to play with.
By the way I shot the Martini-Henry at 300 yards for the first time on Saturday and put all 10 rounds into the black. Woo hoo! I amazed myself as well as the guys on the firing point and those in the butts.
The sights were set at 200 yards and the rounds were (sort of) grouping at 12 o'clock.
I love that rifle.
How did you get on at the weekend, Mick?
Brian
I knew I'd seen that excellent thread somewhere. Doh!
That should give me lots of material to play with.
By the way I shot the Martini-Henry at 300 yards for the first time on Saturday and put all 10 rounds into the black. Woo hoo! I amazed myself as well as the guys on the firing point and those in the butts.
The sights were set at 200 yards and the rounds were (sort of) grouping at 12 o'clock.
I love that rifle.

How did you get on at the weekend, Mick?
Brian
- Strangely_Brown
- Regular visitor
- Posts: 84
- Joined: Wed Jun 22, 2005 9:10 am
- Location: UK
Not well Brian to be honest, I entered the Monday & Tuesday meeting knowing that I had been under par for a few weeks now and it showed!
The weather was the killer for me and a few others as well, and I noticed that their were a few "washes" being called down from the butts, which in this event is unusal.
I had two washes on the Monday even after getting two very respectable sighters.
I scored slightly better in the moving man which I won with a No4 last year but was soundly beaten by at least three other shooters, the NRA are looking at doing more Service Rifle which can only be a good thing and that includes more moving targetry.
Oh well there's always next year,...............err didn't I say that last year!
The weather was the killer for me and a few others as well, and I noticed that their were a few "washes" being called down from the butts, which in this event is unusal.
I had two washes on the Monday even after getting two very respectable sighters.

I scored slightly better in the moving man which I won with a No4 last year but was soundly beaten by at least three other shooters, the NRA are looking at doing more Service Rifle which can only be a good thing and that includes more moving targetry.
Oh well there's always next year,...............err didn't I say that last year!

Mick
Aye Mick its no weather for white man shooting, especially with run downs.
Brian we made up some of these targets a couple of years ago for our shoots.
landscapes are easy, just sight in for an aim point centre bottom of the target frame, Oh shite I've given my secret away.
Sky colour patches are getting harder to find mind.
Brian we made up some of these targets a couple of years ago for our shoots.
landscapes are easy, just sight in for an aim point centre bottom of the target frame, Oh shite I've given my secret away.

Sky colour patches are getting harder to find mind.


- GrantRCanada
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Sun Mar 19, 2006 12:42 pm
Brian:
In the hope that they may be of some use to you, here are the "target pages" from my circa 1913
Parker's Rifle Shot's Register .... (I say "circa" because the Register itself is undated, but it contains
the NRA Sight Regulations for the year 1913, and I gather these were updated annually in the
Registers.)
The entire Register is reproduced on Jay Curragh's "The Lee-Enfield Rifle" website:
http://enfieldrifles.profusehost.net/pa.htm
(I've left the page images rather large so you can hopefully make out all the dimensions, etc. - my apologies
if they "bloat" this thread excessively) ...
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i219/ ... krcov2.jpg[/pic]
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i219/ ... page25.jpg[/pic]
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i219/ ... page26.jpg[/pic]
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i219/ ... page27.jpg[/pic]
http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i219/ ... page28.jpg[/pic]
In the hope that they may be of some use to you, here are the "target pages" from my circa 1913
Parker's Rifle Shot's Register .... (I say "circa" because the Register itself is undated, but it contains
the NRA Sight Regulations for the year 1913, and I gather these were updated annually in the
Registers.)
The entire Register is reproduced on Jay Curragh's "The Lee-Enfield Rifle" website:
http://enfieldrifles.profusehost.net/pa.htm
(I've left the page images rather large so you can hopefully make out all the dimensions, etc. - my apologies
if they "bloat" this thread excessively) ...
Grant Rombough
Medicine Hat, Alberta
Canada
Medicine Hat, Alberta
Canada

- Brian the Brit
- Contributing Member
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- Joined: Tue Feb 17, 2004 8:15 pm
- Location: Dorset, England
Targets
Brilliant!
Many thanks, Grant.
Many thanks, Grant.
