$4000 a month? That's definitely way above "average" for me!
....yeah, that's why I put it in quotes. My schoolteacher son makes about $3000 a month. A minimum wage dude would make a third that....
Early 60s Dad was making about 1.75 an hour as a construction worker and I think this was teamster scale.
I fully understand the comments on the amount of money people had, especially on the frontier. But carving of some short was almost standard on firearms of the time. Military muskets had carving around the tangs.
So we have to then ask what did a really cheap rifle consist of.
Then we must address that fact that the Native Americans would not usually buy a base line rifle. See "British Military Flintlock Rifles" by Bailey.
According to orders for Wilson Indian Trade rifles in 1781 of the 312 rifles there were 3 different types ordered in these quantities. Cost was what the British gov't paid.
156 Best Rifle Guns wood boxes moulds & cases. 52/6
108 Best Rifle Guns with brass boxs moulds & cases. 53/6
48 Rifle Guns wood boxes moulds & cases 50/
Prices are in Shillings. 20 shillings = ₤1.
This from pg 81.
Surviving rifles from Wilson are invariably carved to some extent and had a forend moulding. I have no idea what the lowest grade rifle was like but it was apparently not very popular.
Apparently the Natives had come to see a carved rifle as typical. If the vast majority of rifles in the frontier were uncarved I cannot see this being and issue. I would further point out the Bailey states that the rifle armed natives were for the most part armed with American made rifle and the English imports were just a small part of those actually in use until 1778 at any rate.
He further writes that George, John and James Girty had new rifles costing ₤6, ₤7.10.0 and ₤8.10.0. These were late 1775 to early 1776. I seriously doubt they were trade rifles.
Dan