There was recently a lengthy discussion on this forum about "coil worms," meaning tow worms or gunworms made from wire in the shape of a tapered coil spring. I don't know how common they might have been among the general shooting population, but they were certainly offered in trade to the native people of North America.
I ran across a few pictures that might be of interest. This is a J. Hollis & Son flintlock Northwest Gun, item#20/1459 in the collection of the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI):
I don't know if the gun is still functional or not, but it might be. It was collected by an artist named De Cost Smith from the Stoney (Mountain Assiniboine) people some time between 1886 and 1900. The object of interest in this discussion, however, is the rod.
At first glance, you might say this is a ramrod, separate from the gun because of the musket's broken forend and the absence of thimbles or ramrod pipes. However, I think we are probably looking at a rod made "in the country." I think its diameter is probably too large to be carried under the gunbarrel, even if the forend and thimbles were intact. It is also not particularly straight. It may have been used for loading the gun, but I think it also served as a cleaning rod.
Here is a detail photo:
This rod still has its worm in place! You can see how the end of the rod was tapered to match the taper of the coil worm. Furthermore, if you go back to the first picture and look at the other end of the rod, you can see that it has been carved into the shape of a jag, for holding a patch. So, this rod may have been used for loading, but it was almost certainly used for cleaning, and its owner could have used a patch or a wad of tow, or he could have used the worm to retrieve a lost patch if one came off the jag. This rod is a very economical and efficient cleaning tool.
If you're still with me, here is one more picture:
This is a portrait by Karl Bodmer (who should need no introduction here) of an Assiniboine man named
Pasesick-Kaskutau generally translated as "Nothing But Gunpowder." There is a lot that can be said about this picture, but that rod he's holding in his left hand looks a lot like the one in the photographs... The upper end of the rod appears to have a tuft of something wound around it, possibly around a coil worm, and I have convinced myself that the lower end has been carved in the form of a jag.
So many times, we hear people say, "If only that old gun could talk!" Well, this one is speaking to us. The gun, with supporting information in the painting, is telling us how it was used and cleaned.
Thanks for reading!
Notchy Bob