MarkCSA wrote:Off the top off my head (read this on Wikipedia somewhere), some Union General knew of the guns, but while the Army was still debating wether to buy them, growing impatient, he sent a few of his guys go out and buy a few anyway.
That would be Butler.
When Cameron requested 1500 troops from Massachusetts, Butler suggested to him that he should ask for a brigade. Meanwhile he took out a bank loan, putting up his textile mill as collateral. Massachusetts didn't have the money to ship the brigade to Washington, so Butler loaned them that money, provided they made him the brigadier general. As brigadier, he requested winter uniforms (even though it was spring). None were available, so he wrote a letter to the governor informing him of a certain textile mill that could provide them. The next year he received a 45% dividend ... little things like paying back the loan and buying gatlings were no problem.
He may not have been a military genius, but he was a genuis.
As for the gatlings, the initial models didn't actually do too well. They proved most effective when mounted on gunboats and used as a supplement to cannister for clearing riverbanks. They could provide suppressive fire while the big guns were reloading.