I think
Bob McBride's excellent research has provided us with an appropriate and historically correct name for firearms of this type:
short gunI seem to recall reading about "canoe guns" (sorry, Mike Brooks. I had to say it...) in Mike Nesbitt's column in
MUZZLELOADER magazine a few years ago. If I remember correctly, a customer asked Matt Denison, then the proprietor of North Star West, to build a short trade gun that the customer would use while canoeing. I think this was in the 1990's or early 2000's. In any event, either Matt or his customer started calling it a canoe gun, and orders for these started coming in to NSW asking for them. I'll need to go back through my back issues and look for the article, but that's the way I remember it. So,
canoe gun joins
plains rifle,
tow worm,
throwing hawk, and
possibles bag, and likely a bunch of other terms, as late 20th - early 21st century entries into the muzzleloading shooter's lexicon.
I think we have pretty well established that short guns existed. Just to get this out of the way, we can mention that some were purpose built, like this German boar rifle from the 18th century:
I think the barrel on this rifle is less than a foot long. It was intended for hunting on horseback. You can link to a video of the Cap & Ball guy test-firing it via Pedersoli's blog:
Shooting An Original 18th Century Short RifleHowever, I think this thread is more concerned with trade guns and "frontier" short guns, assembled from parts. Samuel Hearne (1745-1792) was an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company, and he traveled all over Canada with native bands in the years between 1769 and 1772. He wrote extensively about his experiences, and his writing was published in a book,
A Journey to the Northern Ocean, as early as 1796, or possibly earlier. I found this interesting passage in his memoir, discussing the Indians' methods of hunting moose, and the use of cut-down trade muskets:
The pertinent passage is near the top of the second page: "
...I never knew any of them take a gun [moose hunting]
unless such as had been blown or bursted, and the barrels cut quite short, which, when reduced to the least possible size to be capable of doing any service..." Taken as a whole, the statement from Hearne suggests (to me) that cut-down guns were made in an attempt to salvage a damaged weapon. They were useful in some situations, but the native people had other options for weaponry in that particular methof of hunting.
I looked through James Gooding's book,
Trade Guns of the Hudson's Bay Company, 1670-1970, and found a good discussion of standard barrel lengths. He said detailed data start in 1680, and "for the first decade or so, guns of 5 feet, 4-1/2 feet, and 4 feet were standard" (p.62). Over the next few years, guns of 3-1/2 feet were added and guns of 5 feet were removed. In 1693, there was one order for guns of 5-1/2 feet. The last order for guns of 4-1/2 feet was in 1705. Barrel lengths of 3 feet were first ordered in 1688, dropped five years later, then added on again in 1731. By 1841, guns of 2-1/2 feet were added. So, between 1680 and 1841, standard barrel lengths of trade guns gradually decreased, but at no point did Mr. Gooding indicate that new guns were offered in barrel lengths shorter than 2-1/2 feet (thirty inches).
Isaac Cowie (1848-1917) was a well-educted Shetland Islander who entered the employ of the Hudson's Bay Company in 1867 and stayed on until 1891. He was initially placed at Qu'Appelle, to work as a clerk. Trading was primarily with the Assiniboine, Cree, and Metis people. He wrote a wonderful memoir entitled
The Company of Adventurers. Cowie was an accomplished marksman and a capable hunter, but he was also a shrewd trader and politician. He was very familiar with trade guns. Here are a few of his comments about them:
I apologize if that's more than you want to read, but I thought some folks might find it interesting. The really pertinent comments with regard to "short guns" are on the second page: "The shorter ones, two and one-half feet, were those most in use on the prairies, and these were usually still further shortened by the Indians, for lightness, as well as concealment under the robes or blankets they wore, and because in running buffalo with a good horse the hunter got so close as to singe the buffalo when he fired." So, Cowie's comments suggest that guns were intentionally shortened for specific purposes.
As a final thought, have you wondered how the Indians cut those barrels off? I read... somewhere... that this was done by cutting and then deepening a groove around the barrel with a three-cornered file, which was available from the traders. One of
Bob McBride's submissions (above) appears to support this.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob