just wondering about different patch boxes used on hawken rifles.I have seen a couple variations of the pineapple type and the Mariano and a variation of that one.I'm wondering on real early rifles if they used boxes closer to those seen on rifles built in the east.Something their father may have used I would think Sam might use early on.I been looking around and can't dig up anything and have learned never say never.
Hey Joe,
To elaborate a little more on what Galamb said, J&S Hawken rifles have a number of different style of patch boxes. I've grouped several in the montage below and included the three that Galamb posted above. As you can see, some have Pennsylvania style patch boxes, some have rectangular shaped boxes, some are oval shaped with simple finial, and then you have the utilitarian long oval on the Peterson Hawken and the very elaborate patch box on the Moses White Hawken, which might be a precursor to the pineapple patch box seen on later S. Hawken rifles.
As Galamb alluded to, several of these were probably acquired from commercial supply houses such as Tryon.
Because we don't have good dates on any of the rifles other than the Atchison Hawken, there is not a direct answer to your query, "I'm wondering on real early rifles if they used boxes closer to those seen on rifles built in the east?" But probably, yes, they did.
There are Kentucky style rifles in private collections marked "C&J Hawken" (Christian and Jacob) and "S. Hawken" that were made before they moved to St. Louis.
The C&J Hawken patch box is shown below. The S. Hawken Kentucky rifle is pictured in Charles E. Hanson, Jr.,
The Hawken Rifle: Its Place In History, page 9. It appears to have a patch box similar to this C&J Hawken pattern.
But it is also apparent that, after moving to St. Louis, Jake and Sam used what ever components that were available to them at the time. How else to explain the almost military style patch box on the Peterson Hawken and the wide variety we see on the others? The oval shaped patch box with the simple finial is a pattern they used for decades as it is found on a rifle that might date to the early 1830's as well as rifles from the 1840's and into the late S. Hawken period of the 1850's. So the patch box by itself, is not a good indicator as to whether a rifle is early or late.