Thanks JV! That is great info. I read somewhere online that Ketland and Allport began their partnership around the year 1800. Do you have any information about the date they began? That would really narrow the timeframe that this piece was made. Perhaps then could learn what orders or shipments may have been made in this brief period.
Tim, thanks for your input!
Thanks again!
I do not know exactly when the partnership was formed but it clearly had to be before WK died as Allport is specifically mentioned in his will. It is quite possible it was formed early in 1804, just before WK died. The impression I get from reading the will, and from later events, is that WK wanted to make certain that his brother-in-law, Thomas Izon, did not get control of the firm. When William Allport died and his son set up on his own Thomas Izon did get control...he borrowed money from the company and eventually went bankrupt. The overall impression I get is that he was irresponsible and WK knew it. 18th century doctors were very good at identifying conditions they could not cure so WK probably suffered from something that he knew was fatal and made provision for his family by taking on a partner he trusted.
Barrels were proved separately from the pistols...so I think an 1802 to 1806 time frame is realistic. The company continued to trade as "William Ketland & Co." to the very end.
I know of only one shipment to America in the K&A name and that was much later. This pistol had to have been made for export because there was simply very little market for inexpensive pistols in England. It is very likely that WK&Co used an commission merchant to handle the shipping, in which case their name would not have appeared on the license. It's also possible that the WK firm used James Ketland (who was such a merchant) in which case we would not be able to differentiate between TK and WK guns from the existing documents.