My good friend Reaves Goehring asked me to put out an advance on his recent mini-study regarding one John Brooks, gunsmith. He has yet to print it up, and may never do so, and he is not inclined to sit at a computer, so, with his permission, here goes.
Many are familiar with John Brooks (J. Brooks/I. Brooks), known to be an itinerant gunsmith, taxed first in Lancaster boro, then later in Harrisburg. Reaves wonders what, if any relationship, this story could have.
1780 Lancaster. One John Brooks (J. Brooks/I. Brooks) was brought before the magistrate and charged with refusal to make arms for the continental army. He was ushered to the county line and told never to return.
Reaves believes that, considering the size of the county at the time, that he was taken down to the Susquehanna and banished.
We don't know if this is one-in-the-same to our gunsmith who is taxed again in 1803 in Lancaster and about a decade later in Harrisburg. That would make him rather mature, assuming that he was more than an apprentice in 1780.
Anybody have anything more on this?