In the closing months of the American Civil War, Caleb Huse, the Confederacy's purchasing agent in England was tasked with procuring Spencer Rifles, and the British arms manufacturing firm of Greenwood & Batley, whom the Confederacy had procured the machinery for manufacturing the P1853 British Enfield (only part of which had been shipped and received by the South and was installing at the C.S. Armory at Macon, were also friends of the Chenys. And at the very close of the war, G&B offered Colonel Burton who had been the chief of the armories, a job in setting up armories in Europe as the Spencer Repeating Rifle European Agency. Burton was asked by G&B to stop by the Boston office and gave him a letter of introduction to Warren Fisher, then treasurer of SRC. At that time, B&G were looking at setting up armories in Turkey and at Tula in Russia, the latter where Burton was employed by G&B's superintendent. There may be more information on where all the Spencer armories were located in Europe in Burton's papers which are held in Yale University Library. But Greenwood & Batley, with Burton and Huse, might be responsible for these Belgian made Spencers?