Those rifles were behind glass at the CLA? They must be really sumpin'.
I have never seen these TN guns before, they relate well to the Lexington guns to a certain extent.
Come to really consider it, they relate far better to NC guns with the flower finial. Any of these fellas come over the mountains after being trained in NC?
Most of these guns have been classified variously over the years. At least part of the problem is geographic and political.
Tennessee became a state in 1796. Until a survey in roughly 1779, some of the northern part was considered Virginia and the rest North Carolina. When the boundary between Virginia (Kentucky) with North Carolina (Tennessee) was extended, what is now Tennessee became entirely officially part of North Carolina (not without some resistance and drama, however), although the boundary was disputed vigorously for decades in particulars, and I can find references where it could be argued that Kentucky refers to parts of Tennessee as well.
The settlement of the over mountain region before the (end of) Revolution was officially illegal, but Virginia and to some extent North Carolina at least tolerated it if not encouraged it. One method that made it possible was that both states used a mechanism of creating counties where the westernmost (roughly) incorporated all the state's granted land westward. As the area became a regular county, another county to the west became the super sized county. So, a person could conceivably have been born in what is now Tennessee but was then a county in Virginia. He might have been a resident of one or more counties in Virginia, the same in North Carolina, and the same in Tennessee after statehood (as original counties were divided) and yet never moved. And they often moved, also:).
This is a somewhat simplistic version, but it may help to illustrate one way how gunmakers in Tennessee may be correctly but incompletely and unhelpfully attributed to a county in Virginia or North Carolina if records are minimal. I think there are still surprises awaiting.
For example, Thomas Simson is potentially documented in Rowan County, North Carolina, but that county was a catch-all for parts west at one point. Was Simpson really in modern day area of RC,NC (unlikely) or was he in one of the areas west of there, including Tennessee, and if so, which part!