I thought it would be nice to see some Longrifle themed post and photos on this site again. (I was beginning to think Dennis had changed the site name to "I found this Old Gun.") (laughs)
I only collect and study Longrifles made in North Carolina. Because of this I don't have a large base of knowledge of Longrifles from other states.
Back in 2018, the ladies at the Charlotte Museum of History called me and requested I come down and talk with a gentleman who brought an old rifle into their museum.
I went down and met with the man and he showed me his rifle. The rifle was signed by a well known Lancaster, PA. maker. I asked him how he acquired the old rifle?
He told me that in the late 1980's he had just got out of college and was looking for a job in Rhode Island. Someone he knew had recently purchased an old house in that state that was full
of junk and trash. They brought out a 30-foot-long dumpster and hired him to put everything in the house in it. He filled it up twice. When he got to the attic of the old house he found an old Longrifle. He thought it might be worth something so it did not go in the dumpster.
I asked if he wanted to have it restored or wanted to sell it? He was looking to sell so I bought it.
The rifle has an inlay behind the cheek-rest that is unlike anything on an American longrifle.
I have seen images on this site and in books of Pennsylvania rifles with a man's head with a Phrygian Liberty cap carved into the stock in front of the trigger guard.
Can this be what the man in the inlay has on his head? The rifle he is aiming looks to be a flintlock.
He is wearing a coat (possibly a uniform) and pants, with shoes or moccasins.
Have any of you ever seen anything like this on a Pennsylvania Longrifle?
I will tell you who made the rifle and provide additional photos of the rifle in the future, but for now want to focus on the inlay.
Thanks,
Michael Briggs