Driggs-Seabury

[2] Driggs-Seabury was preceded by the Driggs-Schroeder series of weapons, designed by W. H. Driggs and Seaton Schroeder in the late 1880s and produced by the American Ordnance Company in the 1890s.

[3] The company manufactured motor vehicles 1913–15 and 1921–25, but sold its weapons production and plant in Sharon to Savage Arms in a 1915 merger.

Over the next ten years, with assistance from the War and Navy departments, Driggs attempted to gain foreign orders and resume manufacturing in the United States.

These efforts mostly involved anti-aircraft guns, both land and shipboard types, already in service with the United States and made partially with Driggs-designed components.

The countries Driggs solicited included Poland, Denmark, Turkey, Greece, Lithuania, Venezuela, Colombia, and Guatemala.

3-inch gun M1898 on retractable masking parapet carriage M1898, both made by Driggs-Seabury.
A Hotchkiss 6-pounder gun on USS Oregon (BB-3) , generally similar to the Driggs-Seabury 6-pounder.
1914 Twombly Model A cyclecar .