I have a coworker whom I have conserved several old guns for and he asked me to take at look at this rifle. He only wanted to know if it was anything special. By the way he talked about it I expected an old TC to be handed to me. He said it always sat by his Dad's fireplace and they used to play with it as kids. His father remembers firing the gun with his father back in the fifties.
I was surprised at what he brought me. The stock is sound but the barrel is worse than sewer pipe, the erosion around the drum is very bad. Several screws have been replaced with hardware store items and the lock has a broken sear spring. I will not approve it being fired.
The stock is excellent condition.
Furniture (butt plate, trigger guard, nose cap, escutcheons) are all tight and well fitting.
The barrel key escutcheons have no visible screws or pins holding them on, and I looked hard with raking light.
The ramrod appears to be original, hickory, tapered the last 10 inches.
The tumbler has no half cock notch.
The barrel is unmarked other than six numeral 4s on the bottom.
Under rib is formed steel and riveted on. The two center rivets are missing.
The brass nosecap has brass screws and appear to be original. They are well finished flush.
The triggers are double acting but the forward spring is a crude replacement that covers the forward mounting hole, that screw is missing.
Single lock nail is a hardware store replacement.
Both bridle screws are brass electrical screws.
Barrel is 36" long.
Overall length is 52 3/4".
The rifle appears to have been very well made and well cared for until it began it's life as a decoration by the fireplace. The rifle has been in Indiana, and this family, since at least the early nineteen fifties. Honest stories about it's history are muddy and incomplete.
Any suggestions as to time period, builder, region, would be helpful. Thank you for looking.
DAve