Ken;
I had a senior moment, in regards to the average caliber of most of these composite muskets and fowlers. But, you mentioning Medad Hills, got the train back on track. I have a book, that I haven't looked at for a long time, that has some Medad, and Benoni, Hills, fowlers in it, along with a lot of others. I went back into the book, and discovered that my assumption, that most early fowlers were large caliber, was wrong. As yours are, many of them are .24 and .28 gauge, with the larger calibers being more military muskets, than civilian fowlers. Thanks again.
Hungry Horse