I was asked to post these by our Guild President Bill Madden. I have never seen the rifle but Bill has furnished some photos and a description.
Museum Find – What Have We Here?
Last month, I found a Kentucky flintlock in the Bair Family Museum in Martinsdale, a small community in central Montana. I was able to take some pictures, but because I am barely computer literate, have asked fellow Montana Guild member Dan Phariss to post them for me here.
According to Sotheby’s, who appraised the museum’s collection about 20 years ago, the rifle supposedly dates back to the “1770s” and was attributed to having been built by “Bodenheimer” of “Lancaster, Pennsylvania”. The piece is not signed and the basis for the attribution is not known. The “whale tail” finial on the patchbox was described as being of a style found in the Womelsdorf – Berks County region.
I told the museum’s assistant director that I didn’t think the dating was correct, that the gun was more likely made sometime around the 1820s. I also told her that the only Bodenheimer of which I was aware lived and worked during a later period in Lancaster, Ohio, and that this piece did not resemble what little I have seen of Bodenheimer’s work. However, I also told her that while I am knowledgeable about Kentuckies, there are people on this website who are much more knowledgeable than I, and with her permission, I would post pictures of the rifle on this site for review and comment. She agreed.
I was not permitted to touch the piece or open the patchbox, and the pictures were taken in less than favorable light. I also failed to get all the pictures I would have liked to have taken. Nevertheless, with the help of my daughter, who took the pictures and massaged them into better view, I think what were taken are sufficient for our purposes.
By way of further background, the provenance of the rifle is unknown. It appears to be of about 45 caliber. The barrel is 40 inches long and appears to be straight. If swamped, it is very little. Length of pull is 12 ½ inches. The buttplate is about 4 7/8 in. height by 1 5/8 in. width. Except for a repair of the knuckles on the patchbox lid and a questionable forward screw on the toeplate, I couldn’t see any obvious evidence of repair or restoration. But, the lighting was poor, so I really didn’t get a good inspection of what might have been done to it.
So, what have we here? When was it made? Where? By whom? I will pass along to the Museum whatever pertinent information you can supply. Thanks for all of your help.