Sneha Girap (Editor)

Benjamin B Hotchkiss

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
gunsmith, engineer

Name
  
Benjamin Hotchkiss


Role
  
Engineer

Spouse
  
Maria Bissell Hotchkiss

Benjamin B. Hotchkiss spartacuseducationalcomFWWhotchkissBPjpg

Full Name
  
Benjamin Berkeley Hotchkiss

Born
  
October 1, 1826 (
1826-10-01
)
Watertown, Connecticut, USA

Died
  
February 14, 1885, Paris, France

Organizations founded
  
Hotchkiss et Cie, Hotchkiss Ordnance Company

People also search for
  
Maria Bissell Hotchkiss, William Henry Bissell, Eliza Ann Loveland

Benjamin Berkeley Hotchkiss (October 1, 1826 – February 14, 1885) was one of the leading American ordnance engineers of his day.

Contents

American career

Hotchkiss was born in Watertown, Connecticut, and moved to Sharon, Connecticut in childhood; his early experiments were made there in his father's hardware factory. Starting in the 1850s, he was employed as a gunmaker in Hartford, working on Colt revolvers and Winchester rifles.

French career

After the American Civil War, the U.S. government showed little interest in funding new weapons. In 1867, Hotchkiss moved to France and set up a munitions factory, first in Viviez, near Rodez, then in Saint-Denis, near Paris, named Hotchkiss et Cie. At about this time, he developed a revolving barrel machine gun (in French: "canon-revolver") known as the Hotchkiss gun; the gun was made in four sizes from 37 mm to 57 mm, the largest intended for naval use. After his death, the Hotchkiss company also developed in 1897 and later manufactured in large numbers an air-cooled, gas-actuated infantry machine gun which was widely used by several countries, particularly France and the United States during World War I.

Personal life

On 27 May 1850 he married Maria Bissell Hotchkiss, who after his death founded The Hotchkiss School in Lakeville, Connecticut and the Hotchkiss Library in Sharon. Hotchkiss committed bigamy when he married a Miss Cunningham in a French civil ceremony in Paris in 1867; they had one daughter, who died at the age of nine.

References

Benjamin B. Hotchkiss Wikipedia