Career
Sharps began work as a youth when he was an apprentice to a gunsmith in Washington, New Jersey. He then accepted an entry level position at the Harpers Ferry Arsenal in the 1830s working as a filer. While at Harpers Ferry, Sharps was introduced to the Hall rifle, an early breech-loader, and worked for its inventor, Captain John H. Hall.
Sharps also became versed in the manufacture of weapons with fully interchangeable parts.
Sharps was issued a patent for his design of a breech-loading rifle on September 12, 1848. The deficiencies of the Hall rifle may have caused Sharps to adopt his new design.
The Sharps rifle was designed with a vertical dropping block action, operated by a lever which also served as a trigger guard. The action was not only strong but limited the release of gases when the gun was discharged.
Sharps" first rifle, the Model 1849, was manufactured by Associate of Science Nippes & Company at Mill Creek, Lower Merion Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.
Despite not being the first breech-loading rifle, Sharps" was the first to be accepted widely and, with the onset of the American Civil War, the first to be produced in large quantities. The Sharps, in a carbine version, was the most widely used cavalry carbine by the Union Army. lieutenant was so successful that it was copied and manufactured by the Confederate government to arm its mounted troops.
Sharps-designed firearms later saw extensive use in the American West as military and hunting weapons.
They were highly regarded as target rifles and were used extensively in international shooting competitions through the late 19th century. Although the Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company bore his name, Christian Sharps was not the company"s owner.
Both firms were located in Philadelphia. In all, he was awarded a total of fifteen firearms-related patents.
In 1870 Sharps and his family moved to Vernon, Connecticut, where he continued working on firearms design and started a large trout farming business.
Succumbing to tuberculosis, Sharps died in Vernon, on March 12, 1874.