Well, I purchased this rifle and a percussion Taylor & Son double barrel shotgun - to keep them from going to a Pawn Shop. I have completely disassembled the rifle and have the following observations. Please understand I am not arguing with some of the previous post - just giving my opinion and observations.
It has obviously had some blueing done. As weird as it may sound, I do not think the stock has been replaced. The inletting and such is picture perfect and would have taken quite a bit of effort to coordinate and layout. I will post pictures before I reassemble and let the reader decide. It has been refinished for sure. Maybe modified a little, but I have found another Leman Swivel Breech percussion that was sold on the internet by CS Acquisitions and the butt stock is almost identical. It has the same butt plate, the same check rest and profile. The wood on it does appear to have artificial stripes though. I can not account for the added toe plate on mine.
I am not sure about screws being replaced either. The few wood screws fit like they should. The metal to metal screws are so unique, it again would take a monumental effort to replicate them.
The barrels are one .36 caliber and one that I now think is a .44 caliber. I measure it around .420. The .36 is a little pitted, but could be shot. The .44 is too pitted to be shot in my opinion. The percussion nipples are very old, again in my opinion. They have a very large inside cavity/opening - but they are in very good condition. They removed easily.
I am not sure about the ram rods. There are two different sizes (for two different bores as should be) and they fit well. However, someone apparently painted them black. I am going to remove the paint and see what they look like.
The lock works great and is in very good condition. Same for the patch box. The trigger group is in great condition also.
All internal parts are present and in good shape, except for one pin. The pin I reference is used for locking the rotating plates into a set position. It is there, but the end of it has apparently worn down. There are two plates which for lack of proper knowledge - I will call breech plates The forward one has the pin in it and attaches the barrels to the assembly. The rear breech plate has a groove (with indentations) in it, and the pin falls into those grooves to hold the rotating barrels in place. I don't totally understand what i am seeing, but I will post pictures to get some feed back. Without that pin engaging the detents, the barrels will freely rotate. The are no other parts associated with the pin. As best as I can determine, it is a friction fit. No release levers, springs or anything like that. You can tighten a nut that threads onto a bolt holding the two plates together to get a tight or loose fit. If there is something missing - it is not obvious at all.
I purchased the rifle with the intent of cleaning it up and carrying to Friendship next month to sale. With the pitted barrel and worn pin, I don't know for sure where it is headed now.