The best resource I've found for information on the Fordney gun makers is
The Pennsylvania-Kentucky Rifle by Henry J. Kauffman (1960). Frank M. Sellers's
American Gunsmiths lists ten different Fordneys, but he doesn't provide any information on their inter-relation. James Gordon in
Great Gunmakers for the Early West pretty much summarizes the information from Kauffman and Sellers, so there seems to be little new information.
Kauffman states that, "The will of Jacob Fordney, recorded in the Lancaster County Court House in 1819, tells that he had a number of children, including Melchoir [the sources vary in the spelling of 'Melchoir', some have the 'i' first, some have the 'o' first], Jacob, and Elizabeth. Melchoir and Jacob became two of Lancaster's outstanding gunsmiths; and their sister married Jacob Kraft, who was probably the son of an earlier Jacob Kraft, both of whom were gunsmiths." Kauffman goes on to say, "Most of the collectors in the Lancaster area have been of the opinion that Jacob Fordney was the son of Melchoir, but it is evident from the will of the father that they were brothers. It has also been established from the Lancaster tax list of 1834 that there were two Jacob Fordneys who were gunsmiths at that time. It is impossible to separate them or their work, so the following data could apply to one or both of them."
Sellers gives the birth date of 1808 for Jacob Fordney and his death in 1878. James Gordon says he was apprenticed to Jacob Gumpf. Kauffman cites an advertisement from the
Columbia Spy, June 23, 1830 [He also gives the date of the ad as June 23, 1831, so one is a typo.] that appears to be notice that Jacob Fordney was starting in business as a gunsmith after finishing his apprenticeship and maybe a year or two as a journeyman. The ad is interesting in that Fordney states, "Guns altered to the Percussion principle..." Jacob Fordney was evidently an early adopter of the percussion system as apposed to his older brother Melchoir, who apparently only made flintlock rifles up to his death in 1846.
Government records show that Jacob Fordney made 250 rifles for the Bureau of Indian Affairs in 1837, and his name appears in records of the American Fur Company, but only 12 rifles are documented as being purchased by AFC.
He obviously found other markets for his rifles as Kauffman cites an advertisement from the October 24, 1835 issue of the
Pittsburgh Gazette where Jabob Fordney was looking to hire 15 to 20 good journeymen gun makers for his gun manufactory.
There are close parallels between Jacob Fordney and Henry Leman in their early life. Both were born in Lancaster, and Jacob Fordney was only 4 years older than Henry Leman. Leman apprenticed with Jacob's brother, Melchoir for 3 years, so they undoubtedly knew each other. Both made rifles for the Bureau of Indian Affairs under the 1837 contract, and they appear to have competed in the same civilian market based on surviving rifles. Leman was more successful in growing his business than Fordney, though. By 1850, Leman had 34 employees and was making 2,500 guns annually. There is no indication that Jacob Fordney's business grew any larger than the 15 to 20 employees he advertised for in 1835.
As far as the other Fordneys, the list from Sellers is:
- Casper Fordney (1807- ?) Lancaster, PA 1828-1835, Mt Vernon, Ohio census 1835-1850
- Henry Fordney (? - ?) Lancaster, PA tax records 1833-1838
- Isaac Fordney (? - ?) Lancaster, PA tax records 1840
- Jacob Fordney (? - 1819) Lancaster, PA, Melchoir's and Jacob's father
- Jacob Fordney (1808 - 1878) Lancaster, PA, Melchoir's brother
- Jacob H. Fordney (1835 - ?) Mt. Vernon, Ohio, Son of Caspar Fordney
- John Fordney (? - ?) Lancaster, PA business directory 1843-1853
- John J. Fordney (? - ?) Lancaster, PA business directory 1894
- Melchior Fordney (? - 1846) Lancaster, PA business directory 1809-1846
- Philip Fordney (? - ?) Lancaster, PA tax records 1836
Casper Fordney could have been a brother to Melchoir and Jacob based on birth date, but he could also be a cousin if there was another Fordney family in the area. The later seems likely because we see a Henry Fordney, an Isaac Fordney, a John Fordney, and a Philip Fordney in the Lancaster business and tax records during the 1830s and 1840s who are probably of the same generation as Melchoir and Jacob. It's doubtful they were all brothers.
Melchoir Fordney often engraved his name in script of the top barrel flat. Jacob Fordney usually stamped his barrel with "J. FORDNEY" in block letters or "
J. Fordney" in script letters over "LANCASTER, PA". I don't know if any examples of John Fordney's rifles exist, but there is enough consistency in the architecture of rifles, style of patch box, and engraving style to suggest that rifles marked in block letters "J. FORDNEY" and those marked in script letters "
J. Fordney" were made in the same shop.
J. Fordney marked rifles with back action percussion locks are common, but he also build some with regular percussion locks and a few with flintlocks.