I think you're wanting to see "iron mounted" there. I can clearly see a comma after "best iron" (partially obscured by the big "J"). Besides, why would one gun be made of the best iron, and the other one "Best iron mounted"?
There are others who have seen the mark that resembles a comma as an ink blob on the bracket like the one at the lower end of it or on the bottom of the seven in the price. The writer was clearly having a problem with his quill at that point in the document.
As for the underscore after "best iron" on the second line--I tried to explain that underscores were used in account books to show where text had been left out. Ditto, abbreviated as Do was used the same way.
I have no dog in this fight and was merely trying to point out this document in relation to the mounts of the iron mounted rifle that were dug in an Indian site at about the same time.
Gary
I do appreciate your comments in relation to the iron mounted rifle recovered from the burial. I also appreciate your posting the photos of that document.
This reference to "best iron" may, indeed, be in reference to iron mounts, but, IMHO, the way it is worded can suggest either Best iron barrels or best iron mounts, depending on one's interpretation.
Personally, I dunno. I do wish the wording was less ambiguous.
God bless
I believe that the term is fairly unambiguous, just something important to clear understanding of it was left out of this discussion, that being the historical context of the phrase "best iron". Just on the face of it, that phrase had to me the appearance of being a "buzz word" or standard phrase... a "term of art" specifically related to gunmaking, the meaning of which would have been clear to anyone with knowledge in the area at the time but which has since lost to us through technological change. Indeed the technology of today in the form of Google makes short work of researching a matter such as a turn of phrase. I found a number of uses of this term of art on the web, and the ones that I found that related to gunmaking almost all referred to gun BARREL making (one maker of note contracted with the U.S. government in February of 1800 to make the locks of his pistols of "best iron" (
http://www.archive.org/stream/simeonnorthfirst00nortrich/simeonnorthfirst00nortrich_djvu.txt ). Now mind you I'm not saying that "best iron" was used only by gunmakers or that they used it only with barrels.... nor that the meaning of the term would have been absolutely identical to everone who used it, but it was a term widely applied specifically to gun barrels because of the obvious need for use of strongly made iron in a gun barrel and would have been a term that followed gun barrels from their makers, into trade channels... perhaps losing some specificity along the way, or not. In that regard the best reference (see:
http://www.wvculture.org/history/businessandindustry/harpersferryarmory05.html ) to "best iron" I found in a cursory review of historical literature, was the published testimony to a select committee of the U.S. Congress on 20 March 1854, of Colonel Benjamin Moore, a man who had 19 years experience as the master-armorer at Harper's Ferry Arsenal... because Col Moore made clear in his testimony that this term of art had metallurgical complexities that would not necessarily be understood even by military men of some stature... he gave as a hypothetical the Secretary of War (Col. Moore was obviously not a man of nuanced political skill... either that or he had something in particular against Jefferson Davis who then served as U.S. Secretary of War).
I can't claim to have found the earliest historical fountainhead of the use of the term of art "best iron". My best guess would be that writings of this nature now published on the web dwindle considerably for dates before 1800... that and and writing itself was a lesser occupation the further back in time one goes. But I have managed to follow it from its heyday into its use a term of disgust as technology advanced. For instance, to William Greener in 1858 when properly used it was still a term of approval; but for W.W. Greener by 1888 it was more like a lingering bad taste. For more insight, see:
1799 U.S. War Department correspondence:
http://wardepartmentpapers.org/document.php?id=30370 A new and complete dictionary of arts and sciences: including the latest improvement and discovery and the present states of every branch of human knowledge, Volume 2, Collins & Co., article on "Gun-Smithery" 1819:
http://books.google.com/books?id=CDlOAAAAYAAJ&pg=PT367&lpg=PT367&dq=guns+barrels+%22best+iron%22&source=bl&ots=AU15NixmBW&sig=eFxgG8naLceLoDkipGoIf9HxCQg&hl=en&sa=X&ei=DkAHT6yhEoSCtgeN2tGfDw&ved=0CEIQ6AEwBTgy#v=onepage&q=guns%20barrels%20%22best%20iron%22&f=false "Edinburgh Encyclopedia" by David Brewster, article "Gun Making" (1832):
http://gluedideas.com/content-collection/edinburgh-encyclopedia/Gun-Making_P2.html "Engineer's and Mechanic's Encyclopedia" by Luke Hebert (1835), article on "Gun":
http://gluedideas.com/content-collection/engineers-and-mechanics-encyclopedia/Gun_P1.html"Gunnery in 1858: being a treatise on rifles, cannon, and sporting arms" by William Greener:
http://www.archive.org/stream/gunneryin1858bei00greerich/gunneryin1858bei00greerich_djvu.txtHouse of Commons Papers, Vol. 42, 1866:
http://books.google.com/books?id=nw8TAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA132&lpg=PA132&dq=guns+barrels+%22best+iron%22&source=bl&ots=bUz62yjZ7g&sig=HZ--mmHeMdP5Tfo-EnJATYD3B9U&hl=en&sa=X&ei=jDcHT4O_L9LAtgeF2uzQBg&ved=0CE0Q6AEwBw#v=snippet&q=%22best%20iron%22&f=falseThe American Cyclopaedia. Vol7, article "Fowling Piece", 1873:
http://chestofbooks.com/reference/American-Cyclopaedia-V7/Fowling-Piece.htmlMODERN SHOT GUNS, W.W. Greener 1888:
http://www.archive.org/stream/modernshotguns00greeuoft/modernshotguns00greeuoft_djvu.txt