yeah, plus a whole slew of other cartridges like .45-90, .45-110, .40-70, .38-55, 40-55 sharps bottleneck, .40-65, and on and on. towards the 1880s and 90s small bore rifles took over the target shooting scene (small bore meaning less than .50 caliber) while the .45-70 and its children and the .50-70 and larger cartridges held sway in hunting circles. intrinsically all these cartridges can perform well on the range but express cartridges were favored. A period muzzleloader vs a period breach loader could be just as accurate (especially one as well made as a rigby rifle) but keeping your powder charges accurate etc is harder when loading on the line. a cartridge can be loaded at home in a controlled environment so it's generally more accurate. Reloading your own shells for the matches was already a very common practice by the 1870's.
all these cartridges are still popular in BPCR shooting, where matches are shot at ranges out to 1,000 yards. sometimes they shoot out to a mile. the trajectory is like a rainbow but with bullets this heavy wind is much less of a concern! shooters generally shoot with period correct tools too, like wood shooting sticks. tang ladder sights are required, any scope would bottom out at range due to the elevation required.