Hey Frank what happened to your thread? I went to do some digging, came back and it's gone!
Well since the Bucks stuff has been hot of late we should discuss this anyway. There is the early piece on the KRA CD as well as the early rifle that George wrote up in an article in MB in the 1990s, "A Case of Lehigh Valley Longrifle Evolution." Also there are a couple of others, I know of one definitely the same guy but not yet published and possibly one or two others. All of the same period I mean - everyone has been trying to back-date, forward-date, sideways-date etc. this guy because whoever he was, he was one $#*! of a gun stocker and we'd all like to know who he was and where he was working.
We've covered some of this a few times previously over the years, the most recent I remember is here:
http://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=32913.0;nowapOther than seeing one or at most two more that I'm convinced are the same guy, I still don't know who he was.
IMHO: the guy was definitely working in Bucks Co area, not up toward Allentown or elsewhere in Northampton/Lehigh as George originally investigated. I just don't see it, especially when looking at the KRA CD rifle as you can literally see the evolution from what looks like the earliest piece (the 1990s MB rifle, that Mr. M originally found) to the KRA CD rifle, which despite retaining an earlier appearance is already melting into the later more 'standardized' Bucks style. And the other pieces I mention also seem to be directly pointing toward the later Bucks style, nothing relative to further north into Northampton/Lehigh.
IMHO: this guy very likely was responsible for teaching a number of the later guys; my guess is this guy had a shop with a number of apprentices and some of them at least are some of the later well-known "names."
I have discussed this for quite a while now with some people who think these may be early works of Andrew Werner/Verner. I can kind of see it, kind of not. I just don't know. Hey Eric Armstrong - do you have any more information on Verner? Im not aware that his genealogy has been definitely confirmed so I'm not sure any of us can definitively pinpoint how old he was, when he was working or how early etc.
If many of the early records out of Bucks had not been lost, we might have some more direction. Frances Waite who has published a couple of limited circulation books dealing with Bucks Co. genealogy and history probably knows more about early Bucks Co history than anyone alive; she had published a compilation of all of the surviving early tax records although many townships were absent (lost in fire) and I don't recall seeing anything earth shattering as the most complete information is post-Rev. What would be most helpful would be the 1750s-1760s period; I don't recall there being much available for that period and I no longer have the book.
Also, while we often are looking for this guy somewhere in upper or mid Bucks/Montgomery, the possibility also exists that maybe what we have here is a guy working earlier in Philadelphia (or in the immediate area) and the influence percolated northwards from there. Possibility? There were quite a few gunsmiths in Philadelphia from very early on, and of course every conceivable component was available for sale. The earliest of these pieces, the 1990s MB rifle, looks to have imported furnishings and on the sole occasion that I had the good fortune to handle it when displayed a long, long time ago, the whole piece really had a very strong European feel to my mind. Whoever he was, many seem to think he was a 'just off the boat' guy. Very possibly, don't know but very definitely extremely well trained.