Such weaponry included 400 Enfield rifles, 45 snider rifles, 110 carbines, 87 handguns and one cannon with 200 shells, culminated from hidden caches on Saint Thomas, Curaçao and Haiti.
Enfield | London Borough of Enfield | 1853 in literature | Lee-Enfield | Royal Enfield | Harry Enfield | Snider-Enfield | M1917 Enfield | William Collins (sportsman, born 1853) | Pattern 1914 Enfield | Enfield Town | Enfield, New South Wales | Enfield Lock | pattern matching | Pattern 1853 Enfield | John McDougall (footballer born 1853) | Enfield Grammar School | Royal Enfield Bullet | Pattern 1908 and 1912 cavalry swords | pattern | IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence | Harry Enfield's Television Programme | Enfield, Connecticut | Bloodstain pattern analysis | Widmanstätten pattern | Universal Camouflage Pattern | Thompsonville (Enfield) | The Pattern | Splinter pattern camouflage | Site of Krasnokholmsky Bridges, 1853, from ''Khotev's Atlas''. Note the channel separating Red Hills (triangular island) and the angle of bridge across Moskva River |
Although the game fails to separate the two factions and only placed one rifled musket in the Springfield, while the Confederates used them as field pickups they used Pattern 1853 Enfield.