Good morning all. I am new to this Forum and this is my first post so please excuse any mistakes I make in posting.
I am hoping to learn as much as I can about the gun I depict in this post through the collective wisdom and experience of all of you. Please excuse the quality of the images I have posted -- I only have my Iphone available and I used it hand held to take the pics. I am a little shaky these days being somewhat "long in the tooth" (86) and with diminished vision.
But to the gun:
The person from who I purchased it knew very little about it. He believed it was made as a trade gun (in its present converted to percussion configuration)
Research References I have available:
FLINTLOCK FOWLERS, The First Guns Made in America, Tom Grinslade, Scurlock Publishing Company Inc. 2005
GUNS ON THE EARLY FRONTIERS, From Colonial Times to the Years of the Western Fur Trade, Carl P. Russell, Dover, 2005
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF TRADE GOODS - VOL. 1, FIREARMS OF THE FUR TRADE, James Austin Hanson, Museum of the Fur Trade, 2005
FOR TRADE AND TREATY, Firearms of the American Indians 1600-1920, Ryan R. Gale, Track of the Wolf Inc. 2010
FOUR CENTURIES OF LIÈGE GUNMAKING, Claude Gaier, Eugene Wahle & Sotheby Parke Bernet, 1976
THE FLINTLOCK: ITS ORIGIN, DEVELOPMENT & USE, Torsten Lenk, J. F. Hayward, G. A. Urquhart, Skyhorse Publishing Company, 2007
All comments, corrections and observations are much appreciated.
James
Gun images:
.54 caliber smooth bore - 43" long barrel - cherry stock - brass furnitureStock forend tip - German silver front sight (no rear sight) - hickory ramrod and front pipeOctagon-to-round barrel - double line moldings along forestock barrel and ramrod channelsRear ramrod entry pipeTrigger guard plate with engraved finialssilver escutcheon affixed to top of stock wristButt plate with engraved finialBritish style buttstockFlintlock with sliding bar safety converted to Percussion using new hammer and drum/nippleH NOCK over WARRANTED stamped on lock plate - I believe this is a spurious stamping?Liège proof/view stamp
E over LG over star in an oval cartouche on top of the barrel near the breech