Gentlemen,
I don’t post on the forum much, but when I do I know I will leave a some more knowledge and better insight. Many thanks to you all for the great input. As Mr. Glazener said, in our world of central heating, cell phones, and the Internet, its sobering to think of how desperately poor so many of our ancestors were, and how much we owe our comforts to the many sacrifices they made.
I always had it in my mind the stereotype that all of Harrod’s men set out with longrifles. I don’t know why I never thought about Mr. Brooks’ idea of a fowling gun being the most likely firearm for a poor young man on the frontier. Based on the average price of a rifle in the area at the time of a rifle at 4 to 6 pounds+ according to the link The Rambling Historian provided and considering that an imported British fowler cost 1/4th that amount, it would seem a very strong likelihood that up until the spring of 1774, my ancestor was using a fowler.
However, Cades Cove Fiddler makes a good point. If I was setting of on the Ohio in 1774 heading into a largely unknown region with a very real fear that the Shawnee might take my scalp, I would make @!*% sure that I did whatever I could to take with me the best weapon possible. We know that after my ancestor left Pennsylvania in 1774, he never returned. It can then only be assumed that he sold off his small farm and whatever he could not take with him before setting off. He was able to get in a corn harvest in 1773, so that with that and whatever else he was able to scrounge up by selling off his farm and other large possessions it just might have been enough for him to afford a plain Pennsylvania rifle – albeit on that had been “loaned out once or twice before he got it”.
I have had the Devil’s own time finding any specific documentation on the weapons that James Harrod’s men took with them. Little did I realize how few examples of a working man’s gun there are from the 1770s. It’s likely a long shot, but I have reached out to the “Friends of Fort Harrod” to see if they might be assist with any specific more information. I definitely go with Bones92 suggestion and not forget that I need keep in mind that I want a firearm that I want to use on a regular basis.
Ed, in regards to the research on my ancestor, its bits and pieces that I have picked up over the years, in researching my 6th Great Grandfather, Capt. Abraham Chapline. While was not an especially famous man, is someone I idolized since I was a boy for his toughness and accomplishments, so researching his life has been an ongoing hobby of mine. Sadly, I do not have any of his original papers. The passage I included in my original post came from the Lyman Draper manuscripts stored at the University of Wisconsin. Draper interviewed one of Chapline’s son’s for his narrative. Draper weaves in and out from speaking in the first and third person in his narrative on Abraham Chapline. I believe it’s not unreasonable to assume that Chapline’s son was quoting from a journal his father kept in those passages in which Draper wrote in the first person. A personal journal may have existed for Abraham Chapline at one time, but I have not been able to tract it down.
After the Revolutionary War started, Abraham joined George Rogers Clark’s Illinois Regiment of Virginia and took part in the capture of Kaskaskia and recapture of Vincennes. In the fall of 1779, while transporting supplies and British prisoners back to Pittsburgh, he was ambushed by a group of warriors under the command of British Indian Agent, Matthew Elliot. After being forced to run the gauntlet several times, he impressed the Wyandott enough with his courage to be adopted into their tribe. He was then taken to live with them near Sandusky, Ohio. In the spring, he learned the tribes were assembling to mount a major invasion of the Kentucky settlements led the British 8th Regt under Col. Bird. He managed to escape and travel more than 300 miles on foot back to Kentucky in three weeks to warn of the invasion. The man had grit.
One of my favorite stories of Chapline comes from a reminiscence told in the following letter written by an elderly Kentucky gentleman by the name of W.B. Harrison in 1884
o "Having been a Captain in the Revolutionary War, after its conclusion, he (Abraham Chapline) was sent with a company of men to Kaskaskia in what is now the state of Illinois to operate as a check upon the Indians. While therein a fortification consisting of a number of cabins called block-houses, he gave some order to which James Whitecotton, one of his men, took exception, and said to some of the men, if he was on equal terms with his Captain, he would whip him for certain for that order. The Captain (Abraham Chapline) having learned that Whitecotton was chafing under the supposed injury, called his men up and said to Whitecotton, ‘I learn that you take exception to my order and resent that you are not on equal term with me so as to obtain satisfaction; now if the men of this company will pledge their honor to keep the matter a perfect secret until we shall be mustered out of the service, I will cheerfully lay down my commission long enough to give you the desired satisfaction.”
"Of course the promise of secrecy was quickly given, and the two men weighing each about 145 pounds went easily into the settlement with their fists. Finally, the Captain threw Whitecotton, who finding he was overpowered, spoke the word "enough!" and the affair was ended. From that time forth so long as those men lived, they were the most devoted friends.
"Whitecotton was a poor thriftless man, and I knew him to be over 99 years of age. He and his Captain resided more than 30 miles apart, but once a year Whitecotton walked that distance to spend a week or two with his former Captain who was always glad to see him."(letter of W B Harrison, 1884)