What would a 200 year old flintlock look like in 1780?
Sorry I could not resist
A matchlock.
In response to the topic, not Don Stith specifically:
I remember seeing the movie The Black Robe and being shocked at seeing bare fresh wood on buildings in that movie, which is a favorite of mine. Of course it made total sense; the colony was new.
Here we have folks responding who are in 2 camps, though there are probably some who like their rifles both ways (aged and as new).
I'm wondering if those who prefer them "as new" are re-enactors, at least in their mental approach to the hobby (passion, if you prefer). In other words, when they handle, carry, shoot, or hunt, they imagine themselves in the period.
Similarly I wonder of those who prefer them aged have a different mental approach. Perhaps they look back and study that period of history and the years between remain in their consciousness. There may also be folks who would like to be collectors, but are never going to own a significant early rifle, or a particular one, and so would enjoy having an Albrecht or Dickert or J&S Hawken or whatever that looks an original that has been passed down through the years?
Or for some it may be as simple as the way their minds work. Like, "It's a new rifler and should look like one"?