1796 Spadroon
Heavily criticized for its poor design, the 1796 British Infantry Officers Sword, commonly known as the “1796 Spadroon“, was the British Army’s standard-issue line regiment’s officer sidearm throughout the Napoleonic Wars. The 1796 Spadroon’s defects were particularly problematic in an era when officers’ swords were still routinely used as weapons in combat and had not yet been relegated to mere decorative accouterments accompanying dress uniforms as is the case today.
Spadroons – straight-bladed, flat-backed, single-edged light swords of the cut and thrust type – were not bad weapons in of themselves. But the designers of the 1796 Spadroon managed to take a concept as simple as a sword – something that had been around for millennia – to the drawing board, then come back and produce a weapon that was bad at cutting, thrusting, defense, and was poorly constructed to boot.
The first problem was the hilt, which was that of a smallsword – a purely thrusting weapon such as a rapier – and made the sword ergonomically unsound and ill-suited for the handgrip necessary for cutting and slashing. When an officer overcame that problem and managed to get a good grip for cutting, the blade was too light and too flexible to make a telling cut, and frequently bounced off even from naked skin. The excessive flexibility also made the sword ill-suited even for the thrusting its hilt was best suited for. The thrusting problem was further exacerbated by the lack of a profile taper – its point was not as sharp and pointy as it should have been for piercing.
Another hilt problem was the guard: rather than a solid saucer to protect the user’s sword hand, the guard was a foldable clamshell secured by pins, which was liable to give way and break off under impact. The poor hand protection was made worse by a thin and weak knuckle-bow (the projecting piece on the hilt) that bent easily under impact or pressure and was frequently smashed into or pinched the user’s hand.
As a British general of the era summed it up: “Nothing could be more useless or ridiculous than the old infantry regulation [sword]; it was good for neither cut nor thrust and was a perfect encumbrance. In the Foot Artillery, when away from headquarters, we generally wore dirks instead“.