Looking at this question from a North Carolina perspective. When most collectors from outside this state see a iron mounted North Carolina rifle, they automatically assume it is a mountain rifle from the Appalachian School. As Bill Ivey's book well demonstrates, there were many iron mounted Piedmont North Carolina rifles from both the Bear Creek School and the Early Deep River School. Both of these schools were located 150 miles east of the Appalachian mountains. Iron mounted rifles with wooden patchboxes were made in both schools up until the 1830's.
Here are photos of an iron mounted Early Deep River School rifle made by David Gross. I believe he started working near Centre Meeting House on the Guilford - Randolph County line in the 1790's.
In 1806, he purchased 120 acres of land on the Salisbury Road, (today Friendly Ave.) bounded on the west by Horsepen Creek and the east by New Garden Friends Meeting. He built a house and gun shop next door to the Quaker church. He made Longrifles at this address until he sold out in 1821 and moved to Vigo County, Indiana.
This is one of only two complete rifles I have seen and owned that were made by him. I have seen at least five rifle barrels that were signed by him that were later reused on new rifles stocked by gunsmiths in Mecklenburg, N.C. and Virginia. His rifle barrels are stamped D * G.
This rifle has everything I look for in an Early Deep River School rifle. The triple beaded molding runs along the butt-stock from the iron butt-plate to the trigger-guard and is repeated out the fore-stock. David Grose built the entire rifle including the home-made lock and all of the furniture.
pic sharingThanks,
Michael