...therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
...therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
Dr. Richard Gatling

He became interested in medicine, and graduated from Ohio Medical College in 1850. Instead of practicing, however, he moved to Indianapolis in 1854 and took up inventing again without much success.
As the Civil War broke out, he started to focus on developing new weapons, and in 1962 demonstrated the first working model of a 6-barrel gun, each barrel of which could be fired and reloaded in rapid succession by turning a crank. The device was the forerunner of the modern machine gun, and it revolutionized warfare. He secured the patent for the “Gatling Gun” on November 4, 1862.

The original “Gatling Gun”
Accused of unleashing a terrible weapon on humanity, he maintained until his death that he always intended to have the device save the life of the user, and because of its terrible efficiency, make war itself obsolete. He kept improving the gun, later creating a ten-barrel version before the army declared his gun obsolete in 1911 after 45 years of service.


Richard Gatling’s Grave & Inscription
He died on February 26, 1903 in New York City. Due to bad real estate and railroad deals, he had only a fraction of his wealth remaining. Always considering Indiana his true home, he was buried in Crown Hill, section 3, lot 9, on the side of a gently sloping hill.
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