Jerry, certainly Albrecht could have built in many styles. Regarding the one signed rifle of his made in Lititz, I assumed he was following Scripture, “when in Rome, do as the Romans do”. Customers buying rifles in Lancaster probably expected a Lancaster-styled gun, and perhaps that’s why he made that gun that way.
But would your hypothesis, that Paxinosa wanted a particular architecture, explain the identical architecture of the sister rifle?
My thinking about what is strong and what requires a stretch in the proposed hypothesis:
1) That the Paxinosa journal entry and panther motif engraved on the guard supports that Albrecht built this rifle for Paxinosa. I give this moderate strength. For it to be really strong we’d have to firmly believe that Paxinosa requested that engraving (possible but unproven), and that the engraving was unique to Paxinosa’s gun (an argument weakened by those who say that design is used to this day). The assertion has been that by chance, we have captured an unique event. If indeed the engraving is a totem of the Shawnee, Paxinosa was the only Shawnee to ever have a rifle built with that engraving in that time period. Certainly Albrecht built him a gun. A smooth rifle, in fact, if it is this one.
2) That the signature on the sister rifle supports that it was built by Albrecht. Extremely weak. Everybody claims that at best it could be Albrecht’s signature, talks about needing better light, advanced techniques, and so on. Nobody goes so far as to say “ I see the Alb, all right!” And by logic, if the signed sister rifle was built by the same guy (Albrecht) in the same shop around the same time, why is RCA 19 (possibly Paxinosa’s rifle) unsigned?
3) The architecture unlike any Moravian-attributed guns. Extremely weak support for Albrecht making these 2 guns, except somebody made them quite early and there are only a limited number of gunsmiths in the colonies making rifles at that time.
So yes, it is possible Albrecht built these guns, but the reasoning includes none of the sorts of detective work commonly used to attribute unsigned guns: architecture, construction details, decorative elements, and tell-tale tool marks.
It still could be so. The data don’t convince me, yet.