Are any list-members aware of flintlocks signed "Dickert
& Gill"--
with the "&" or "and"?The Kentucky Rifle Foundation website contains this entry:
James Gill School: Lancaster (Pennsylvania/PA) James D. Gill worked with Jacob Dickert who was his father-in-law.
He appears in tax records from 1783-1819, listed as a gunsmith.
Extant flintlocks can be found signed “Dickert & Gill.”
This entry confuses James Gill (Jacob Dickert's son-in-law) with Jacob Dickert Gill (Dickert's grandson).
James Gill died in 1796, so he doesn't appear in tax records from 1783-1819. I don't think James Gill is listed as a gunsmith in any Lancaster County tax records, though I'd need to re-check this.
Dickert and James Gill certainly partnered in running a shop in downtown Lancaster. But I'm wondering whether Dickert produced rifles signed "Dickert
& Gill"? Or whether, if we do accept the images below as "Dickert & Gill" rather than "Dickert Gill," this phrase refers to grandfather and grandson rather than Jacob Dickert and his son-in-law?
I have found online these four images--which could certainly be "Dickert Gill" rather than "Dickert & Gill." Or do others see them differently?
Any thoughts would be much appreciated.