A friend of mine has a couple of guns that he asked me about. I told him if he could send me some photos I would post them for you all to see if you could help identify them. Meanwhile here is a description of each:
The first one is a smooth bore musket that is reported to have been use in the Rev War by his NC ancestor: "There is the word "London" stamped in the lower barrel area along with a symbol." "There is a symbol with crossed items, from the lower left to the upper right is a scepter, and from the lower right to the upper left is an arrow. In the upper quadrant is a crown, with an "R" in the lower quadrant. There is a "B" or an "R" in the left quadrant and a "C" in the right quadrant. There is another identical symbol without the letters or crown".
The second gun is a Kentucky style pistol. He found this one at a sale on the village green of a small town in Ohio back in the mid-60's. He said there was a guy there that restored old guns. He bought a pistol that has a rifled barrel and is a percussion that may have once been a flintlock. The metal hardware is original and is nicely made with brass plates in the curly maple stock. Under the hammer is stamped the word "Roller".
The only "Roller" that I thought of was Bob Roller and I wondered if possibly he might have been the restorer and stamped his name on the pistol? Anyone care to hazard a guess to who this "Roller" might have been? Was there an early maker with this same last name?
Dennis