Wow....great pictures. Someone questioned the flintlock that was shown.....I see no reason to do so. If you had the
authority to remove the barrel I think you might find a date there, he did that on some flintlocks that I have seen, one as
late as 1840. I think Joe Long, and others working in this same mid 1800's period, would build a gun for a customer as
he wanted it....it he wanted a flint gun, he would build it. Dalas Ewing, who was a distant relative of Joe Long, also a
student who collected them and studied them, turned up a rather large calibre Joe Long rifle, I think it was about 58 cal,
and if I remember correctly was found out west or in Canada. From this, one must assume that he probably made the gun for a customer who was going west, and thought he needed a big gun. Several years ago a womon from down in the
Phila. area of the state stopped in the barrel shop and introduced herself.....she was a direct descendent of Joe Long. I
took her up to Beaver Springs and showed her his tombstone. She was looking for a Long rifle, and did eventally find one. A real sleek little gun, a percussion gun, but with two lock bolts and the typical football sideplate, along with a kind of
standard escutcheon found on a front lock bolt. In this case I assumed that it was built as a flintlock since Joe normally
did not use two lock bolts on a percussion gun. I love those pictures............Don
s