Hello everyone,
I am a new to this forum and new to early muzzleloading rifles. I recently purchased a J. Fordney Lancaster Pa. maked rifle off Gunbroker and look forward to possibly getting it into shooting condition with help from the forum members here. I was born in Lancaster so thats what drew me to the rifle, it is a little rough in my opinion but it may be normal for a well used rifle. The rifle has some wood missing around the lock and tang area, I hope it can be fixed. The rifle is on its way here and I will post some pictures when it arrives.
7 grooves would be pretty common and the caliber of 36 would be fairly common for an eastern rifle. This is about the bore size of William Clarks personal rifle taken on the L&C expedition.
But 7 groove barrels are hard to measure. The actual bore size and rifling twist (if it could be measured) would be of interest to me. So many of these have been freshed, bored and re-rifled and back in the day bored for shot that finding an original bore is rare and this is small enough to be original. Freshing is no so bad as boring but still can change the form of the grooves.
Shooting an original Fordney is not good policy from the standpoint of it being a historical artifact and from the personal safety standpoint. Making or having a bench copy made to shoot is the best course.
Everything about original rifles is of importance. The rifling form and twist for example is of interest. Its unlikey that a Fordney will have a shootable bore so to make it shootable freshing or reboreing might be needed. This is just not acceptable today though many original guns were so modified starting in the early 20th century to improve accuracy or to restore them for use in the ML matches at Friendship etc in the 1930s and perhaps before this by people like Walter Cline.
This basically destroys the barrel as a historical reference and may even require a new breech plug etc.
Then there is still the inherit danger in shooting antique barrels.
Some photos of the rifle posted here would be greatly appreciated by everyone here.
Dan