Regarding S & J Hawken full stock rifles, would keys be common or pins?
Rob
It is dangerous to make hard fast statements about Hawken rifles because inevitably an exception will be out there somewhere. But keys were used on all that I've seen in pictures or in person. A lot of full stock J&S and S Hawken rifles do not have key escutcheons, though, and neither do a few of their half stock rifles.
Thanks Brosephs, I’m having a Hawken built for me and want it to be as close as humanly possible to the originals when they were made.
There is so much variety seen in surviving Hawken rifles that to be "as close as humanly possible" you probably would want to pick one and copy it. Otherwise, it might represent certain aspects of a number of different rifles, but end up a generic type.
As far as the original metal finish on Hawken rifles, we only have a very few that retain much of their original finish. These few were finished like Sapergia describes. But did the Hawken brothers finish all their rifles the same way? That we don't know.
We do know that during this period trade rifles and trade guns were ordered with blue, bright, and brown barrels. Obviously, customers had different preferences. Maybe Hawken customers did too.
There are surviving fur trade company documents that describe J&S Hawken rifles as having steel mounts. I find this choice of wording interesting. Prior to the Bessemer smelting process being commercialized in the 3rd quarter of the 19th century, there was very little steel used to make a muzzlelaoder. Generally only the springs in the the lock were made of steel. The rest was made of wrought iron and case hardened when subject to wear. The average person of the day, including the clerks working for the company knew that iron was common and steel expensive and uncommon. So why would they describe the mounts as steel and not iron?
Is it possible that the iron mounts were case hardened and therefore described as "steel" to distinguish them from just plain wrought iron? As case hardened, they would certainly have a steel skin.