Stamp on currently discussed rifle at Julia Auction - This appears have been done with individual stamps due to the varied horizontal spacing, although it appears to be aligned properly vertically.
After doing some online searching I thought at first it was a match to this copy by Art Ressell's Hawken Shoppe per mtn meeks post. This too appears to have been done with individual stamps due to the varied spacing in both horizontal and vertical directions. Note the similarity in the distance between the W and the H, but the serifs are different on most letters including the S which is more script like on Art's gun - while the S's are similar, sorry they are not all uniformly the same even on this small sample - the serifs on some are different, in particular the JC Devine gun, once belonging to James Serven. The W is a different font than on Art's gun as well. The style W on the Julia Hawken has the left inner leg attaching at the center slightly lower down on the right inner leg, plus it has a slight left serif on the center joint making it different than some other stamps that have both inner legs of the W matching at the top together as on Art's gun which also does not have a serif at the center joint of the W. Also there are are W's on other Hawkens as seen below with a cross serif at the center W and others without.
http://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=32210.0But while there are similarities in the size and spacing of the W the font is not an exact match so I gathered up as many original S Hawken stamp images as possible and there is a fair amount of variation both in font and alignment on most -
Jim Gordon book "Great Gunmakers for the Early West" -note W's similar to Julia gun
Jim Gordon book "Great Gunmakers for the Early West" - note W's similar to Julia gun
JC Devine Auction - a bit later Hawken than the others - note the cast buttplate with the straight return (no curve at the juncture as seen J & S rifles and earlier Sam rifles) Also note similarity to stamp on ;ate period Cowans offering below - no center serif on W
Museum of the Ozarks
Rock Island Auction
Clymer Museum Oklahoma
Accoutrement 2 -
Liveauctioneers lot 7374734
Cowans lot 821 Spencer Hawken this a later stamp than others since it was done during Gemmer's tenure as builder - note similarity to JC Devine above
Jim Gordon book "Great Gunmakers for the Early West" - A J & S Hawken stamp with serif on center of W, perhaps this is the earlier styled W that carried over later with some variation in wher the center legs met?
While I don't have near the experience with originals as Don Stith and Louie Parker I have studying the subject since 1962 when I saw my first Hawken, a late Sam model, in guns magazine article, by James Serven (I still have the magazine), have studied all the available literature, have been perusing the Internet for info for years, and have had the good luck to be able to examine several originals first hand. While there are differences in the stamp of the Julia rifle from some of the other stamps yet there are plenty of similarities as well (and yep the Hawken shop used different stamps. not just one or two) so I do not see it as a glaring error.
As for the Dimick guard, why not use a copy on a Hawken if that was what the customer wanted even if he was the competition - the Hawken shop still got the sale?
As noted above the comb end appears to have been damaged and/or repaired/
With all that said and done, the bottom line is without some kind of exacting provenance, there is still the possibility it was another maker's rifle with an added S Hawken stamp to increase value or whatever. I know even as late as back in the 1970's there were a fair number of both original and Hawken shop stamps floating around. Still it's an interesting piece, albeit not a Mountain or California rifle (anybody ever seen one of the latter - an 1850's advert mentions them), which are my main interest(s), in particular J & S Mountain rifles.