This rifle was "debated" for many years. Being unsigned and a common rifle, its maker will probably never be known. It has some western North Carolina characteristics in the "half-round" bow on the guard and the bone inlay that serves as a butt plate...or at least the top extension of one. The few legitimate records of Boone's rifles (and he owned many during his life) indicate that Boone favored finer guns, often with some silver decoration.
The KY Historical Society gun is an "icon" in KY for how so many artifacts were attributed to Boone back at the turn of the century, and how many have turned out to be frauds. An astute KY historian once said of Boone artifacts (and I roughly paraphrase), "One must keep in mind that all of the known Boone artifacts would fill a 10 room mansion, while Boone lived in a single room cabin." Mr. Walden, the original seller of this "artifact," was later known to be a "wheeler dealer" not above "enhancing" an artifact, or other object, if it would help him sell it to a gulible buyer. The old letter states the gun was made by "Graham on the Elkhorn." That reference to Graham was "lifted" from an early Kentucky history; gunsmith William Graham arrived early in KY from Virginia, but his work looked nothing like this gun with North Carolina influences...but in 1900, no one in KY knew that.
The Kentucky Historical Society has, for many years now, known the gun is bogus, but it has been on display for so long, it has become an endearing display of old time ignorance on the authenticity of Boone artifacts. Even the skull casting, in the lower right of the full length view, is highly suspect of whether it was taken from Boone's crumbling scull, or a family slave buried near Rebecca. The shape of the cranial casting is much closer to a black man's skull of that day, than to the known descriptions of Boone's wide head with tall forehead. Boone for years was the "Holy Grail" of Kentucky artifacts in that state, so it's no wonder we have so many proclaimed artifacts, including many of the "later" carved tree trunks with Boone's initials and/or "D. Boon cilled a bar on this tree" slogans. All known examples of Boone's signature, and a good number survive, use the "e" at the end of "Boone." On the other hand, the many dubious artifacts attest to how beloved, and important, Boone was to Kentucky's settlement and early history. Shelby Gallien