Sorry it took a while for me to see this and respond. I am not a horner and have never attempted to build a powder horn. I have been collecting, studying, and selling original Piedmont North Carolina Powder Horns for the last forty years. I see the bee-hive base as largely a Southern item. There are many Piedmont North Carolina horns with bee-hive bases, but I have also seen them on Powder Horns from other Southern States including Virginia, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
I have several North Carolina horns with brass tacks on them, but also have many of them without them.
Here are a few examples.
free image hosting for ebayfree image hosting servicesAs to any connection with the Salem School, that is hard to prove. Jay owns a large French & Indian period banded horn he believes was made at the Single Brothers House.
I own an engraved horn with an image of the Single Brothers House [built in 1766 with two doors and four chimneys] and a exposed timber house on it. It was found at an estate a few miles west of where Andreas Betz and George Betz moved to in Rowan County.
There are two other engraved horns dated 1803 with Stokes County engraved on them. Salem was in Stokes County before part of that county became Forsyth. They may have a Salem connection but cannot be proved.
Blake Stevenson and I have agreed to co-author a book on the "Longrifle Makers of the Salem School." I am looking forward to seeing what we learn in our research.
Michael