I will have to find the link again but when the Wythe Grays of Wytheville, Virginia were called into service and met with the rest of Virginia's First Brigade in Harper's Ferry, a personal diary entry talks of some guns being converted from flintlock. I assume personal guns. Like I said in an earlier post a local historian has researched and found Jacob Shaffer rifles being issued to the home guard in 1863. Virginia's First Brigade quickly became known as the Stonewall Brigade.
I wouldn't assume that the guns were personal guns. Virginia provided military arms made at the Virginia Manufactury of Arms to the Militia units for members who did not have appropriate firearms. A longrifle would not be appropriate for military use. An old fowling piece or musket would be but not a rifle. A rifle could not be loaded quickly and did not use the standard ammunition issued by the state. It is my assumption that most of the militia units in the State by the start of the Civil War were probably using VMA supplied weapons. Many of them probably were flintlock muskets. The arms provided by the VMA mirrored that standard issue by the U.S. Army, if not a few years behind in technology.
A good and well thought out post by Mark. The Virginia Manufactory of Arms ceased production in 1821 due to the fact that the state government felt that adequate supplies of armaments had been produced for the Commonwealth's future needs and that well made arms were finally available from other sources, primarily the federal government, and the relatively expensive production of arms could be stopped. I do not have my copy of Cromwell handy so I am using Bell's on line monograph for production numbers. According to Bell, the Virginia Manufactory produced the following during it's 19 years of production:
58,000 flintlock muskets
2,000 flintlock rifles
10,000 swords
4,000 flintlock pistols
300 cannon
Bell's monograph is available here:
http://springfieldarsenal.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/va-manufactory-presentation.pdfThese arms were manufactured for the use of state forces and many were on issue to the state militia in 1861 but many were still in storage, some still brand new. There were two state facilities for storage, the primary being in Richmond at the Virginia Manufactory and the second was in Lexington where the Virginia Military Institute was soon built and the cadets took over the guard duties of the Lexington facility.
If you will go back to my earlier post of May 3, you can read what sort of arms were issued to Virginia troops in 1861. This document does not tell what arms were issued from the Lexington Arsenal.
I do have to say that Virginiaboy's statement about the Wythe Grays (which became Company A of the 4th Virginia Regiment) was indeed under Jackson from the beginning and the document I linked shows several issues of weapons and ammunition sent to Jackson and his subordinates at Harpers Ferry where the 1st Brigade was training.
As far as the Lexington Arsenal, information can be found here:
http://www.vmi.edu/archives.aspx?id=8737As you can see in all of this, very few civilian arms were issued to front line troops for very long and especially that "squirrel rifles" brought from home were not allowed to stay on issue for longer than absolutely necessary.