When I first heard from the coin dealer asking me to do restoration, I was excited just to be able to get my hands on it and study the piece - I certainly didn't think I'd become its new caretaker. I've been able to research Thomas Baird more and have found some documents online with his name and a little bit about his life - I will compile the information and share it later on. Tim Boone shared a link with a high quality image of a portrait of Thomas Earle ca 1800 by his cousin, Ralph Earl:
Clicking the image should allow you to blow it up fullscreen at photobucket (ignore the photobucket pop-up ads!). It is exciting not only to study an original fowler of this quality and history, but to be able to see the face of the man who made it. One of the buildings in the back is said to be his gun shop. I'd like to have it printed on canvas and display it with the fowler.
Huntinguy - Good observations on the buttplate. I have some original pistols here with swaged buttcaps about 50 thousands thick. I haven't had the buttplate off to do the work on the tang yet, but it is roughly 100 thousands thick. When I have it off I'll be able to tell whether it was hammered out or cast. Given its shape, it wouldn't be difficult to pound one out using maple blocks as forms. The lockplate is original, and is 5 1/2" long by just over 1" tall. The breech of the barrel is 1 3/16" across, but the gun doesn't really feel that big. Even with the 54" barrel, it still balances a few inches behind the entry pipe.
The restoration process will be thoroughly documented with photographs - I have some paying projects that must take priority right now
. I need to talk with some other restoration experts and find some 200 year old scraps of cherry (broken furniture) and some proper leaded brass sheet.
Dennis - I believe the ramrod is original to the gun - it has shadow marks from the ramrod pipes and the nice worm on the thin end. The extension is made of brass, and I don't know whether it is original to the gun or not. It allows the ramrod to go from 5/16" at the shaft to about 1/2" at the end. I can't imagine the front 2" of the original ramrod breaking, and the stock looks to me like it was broken from age and stress, not from a direct impact. Whatever it is, it was very neatly installed and is about .05" thick. I intend to leave it as it is. I haven't found any evidence on the stock to indicate whether it was originally shaped to accept that extension or not.
-Eric