William Ellis Metford (4 October 1824 – 14 October 1899) was a British engineer best known for designing the
Metford rifling used in the .303 calibre
Lee–Metford and
Martini–Metford service rifles in the late 19th century.
Life
He was born on 4 October 1824, the elder son of William Metford, a physician, of Flook House, Taunton, by his wife, Mary Eliza Anderdon. He was educated at
Sherborne School
Sherborne School is a full-boarding school for boys aged 13 to 18 located beside Sherborne Abbey in the Dorset town of Sherborne. The school has been in continuous operation on the same site for over 1,300 years. It was founded in 705 AD by Ald ...
between 1838 and 1841, and was apprenticed to W. M. Peniston, resident engineer under
Isambard Kingdom Brunel
Isambard Kingdom Brunel ( ; 9 April 1806 – 15 September 1859) was an English civil engineer and mechanical engineer who is considered "one of the most ingenious and prolific figures in engineering history", "one of the 19th-century engi ...
, on the
Bristol and Exeter Railway
The Bristol and Exeter Railway (B&ER) was an English railway company formed to connect Bristol and Exeter. It was built on the broad gauge and its engineer was Isambard Kingdom Brunel. It opened in stages between 1841 and 1844. It was allied wi ...
.
From 1846 to 1850, he was employed on the
Wilts, Somerset and Weymouth Railway. After 1850, he worked for
Thomas Evans Blackwell, in connection with schemes for developing the traffic of Bristol, and subsequently acted for a short time under Peniston as engineer on the Wycombe railway, residing at
Bourne End. During this period, he designed an improved theodolite with a travelling stage and a curved arm upholding the transit axis, and also invented a very good form of level.
In March 1856, Metford was elected an associate of the
Institution of Civil Engineers
The Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) is an independent professional association for civil engineers and a Charitable organization, charitable body in the United Kingdom. Based in London, ICE has over 92,000 members, of whom three-quarters ar ...
, and early in 1857 he obtained an important appointment on the
East India Railway under (Sir)
Alexander Rendel.
He arrived at
Monghyr
Munger, formerly spelt as Monghyr, is a twin city and a Municipal Corporation situated in the Indian state of Bihar. It is the administrative headquarters of Munger district and Munger Division. Munger was one of the major cities in Eastern ...
on 18 May to find that the mutiny had just broken out.
With the aid of the railway staff, he took a leading part in organising the defence of the town.
His ceaseless exertions largely contributed to the safety of the garrison, but they permanently impaired his health, and within a year he found himself obliged to abandon his engagement and return to England.
Metford's interest in rifle shooting began in boyhood, his father having established a rifle club with a range in the fields near Flook House, and he gave constant attention to it in the intervals of his engineering studies.
Late in 1852 or early in 1853 he suggested a hollow-based bullet for the
Enfield rifle, expanding without a plug. It was brought out with the assistance of
Robert Taylor Pritchett,
[Delia Millar, ‘Pritchett, Robert Taylor (1828–1907)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004] who was awarded £1,000, by government for the invention on its adoption by the small-arms committee. In 1854, Metford investigated the disturbance of the barrel by the shock of the explosion, which affects the line of flight of the bullet, a difficulty which had led to much misunderstanding. In 1857, the select committee found his form of explosive rifle bullet the best of those submitted to them, and in 1863 it was adopted by government. In March 1869, however, it was declared obsolete in accordance with the resolution of the St. Petersburg convention against the employment of such missiles in warfare.
Metford's chief distinction in rifle progress, however, is that he was the pioneer of the substitution of very shallow grooving and a hardened cylindrical bullet expanding into it, for deep grooving and bullets of soft lead. In 1865, his first match rifle appeared, having five shallow grooves and shooting a hardened bullet of special design (Patent No. 2488).
In 1870, he embarked seriously on the production of a breechloading rifle, paying the closest attention to every detail of the barrel and cartridge. Before long his first experimental breechloading rifles appeared, and at Wimbledon in 1871 two of them were used, with one of which the principal prize for military breechloading rifles was won by
Sir Henry St. John Halford, 3rd Baronet, whose acquaintance he had made in 1862 at the Wimbledon meeting, and who henceforth was his friend and assistant in his experiments. From 1877, the record of the
Metford rifle was an unbroken succession of triumphs.
Between that date and 1894, it failed only four times to win the Duke of Cambridge's prize, while it took a preponderating share of other prizes.
The advance in military small arms abroad, and especially the increased rapidity of loading, caused the appointment of a committee in February 1883 to deal with the question. Metford designed for them the detail of the .42 bore for the rifle provisionally issued for trial early in 1887, and on the adoption of the .303 magazine rifle he gave much assistance in designing the barrel, chamber, and cartridge. In 1888, the war-office committee on small arms selected as the pattern for British use a rifle which combined the Metford bore with the bolt-action and detachable magazine invented by the British inventor,
James Paris Lee.
In 1892, Metford's health finally broke down, and henceforth he was precluded from active work. He died at his house at Redland, Bristol, on 14 October 1899.
Family
About 1856, he married Caroline Eliza Wallis, a daughter of Dr. George Wallis of Bristol.
References
;Attribution
Sources
*Skennerton, Ian: ''The Lee-Enfield Story''. Arms & Militaria Press, QLD Australia, 2007.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Metford, William Ellis
1824 births
1899 deaths
People educated at Sherborne School
British railway civil engineers
English inventors
People from Taunton