I’m sure this has been brought up before and this is more of an historical question as opposed to a build question, but I’ve been pondering it a bit, what would be the historical authenticity of a “smooth rifle”? By that, I mean a gun, stocked and mounted in the style of perhaps a Pennsylvania or Southern rifle but barreled with a smoothbore, let’s say, during the Golden Age roughly?
I have a hard time believing there would have been many of such a gun. On the frontier, one would have taken a rifle over a smoothbore hands down if he could obtain one.
Reason I ask- I’m working up ideas for a build, and I’m stuck on the notion of the proverbial “one gun hunter.” I want a gun that I can safely use to pick off timbering squirrels with shot in the populated world we have today, and in another season be able to load it with ball for big game, then back to shot for spring turkey, etc. That would typically be the realm of the Trade gun, Fowler, or fusil.... but I just really like the style and feel of the rifle...