...but I must say...if those extra strips of brass were really just for decoration....that was a bad idea...the rifle would look much better without them. It's also hard to believe.... because the rest of the rifle is void of any other inlays...rather plain. Are you sure it wasn't a repair? If it truly isn't....could they be there simply as preventative reinforcement...to avoid breakage in the future?
The brass strait pieces inlayed around the buttstock first made me suspect a crack repair. Apparently not so! They are just decoration. Like the gunsmith had some extra material left over after making the patchbox side plates and used them for adornment.
How about 'repair' materials
'reincorporated' into a period restock of a previously damaged and repaired longrifle?
Theory: This could have been a family piece, handed-down and when restocked, all of the rifle's history was preserved, without the 'cracks and damage.'
The original stock 'repair' (if you will) may have really only managed to keep the 'parts' from being separated or discarded and didn't actually serve to return the rifle back to practical service, ; a condition which was later, permanently corrected.
These 'strips,' which today puzzle us, represented a family 'story,' about this longrifle, which is now lost to history... fortunately, for us, this rifle hasn't been.
No way of tell'n for sure... but does blend nicely with this piece, as we find it today.