There is a class of guns I would call revival guns. They are composite guns made to be shooters in the early to mid 1900s. There were not many barrel makers and not many good locks available. No internet and few decent books on longrifles. Guys took barrels and parts from originals, freshed the barrels, and restocked them to be functional. Generally the guns being salvaged for parts were late guns from the percussion era. The goal was to participate in and win shooting matches.
Nowadays as those old NMLRA shooters are dying off these guns show up on internet sales sites. And folks think a demented well digger built them but in my ML club there are some barrels still being used that are probably from the 1800s. One of them about an inch and a quarter has won matches for at least 50 years if the older members are to be believed. On one of them, the barrel has been freshed several times and has dovetails on several flats indicating it has been cut off at the breech and re-breeched.
And nobody cares what the stock architecture looks like. Does it still shoot cloverleafs or oblong holes? That’s the question. Judging these rifles by todays’s build standards makes no sense to me.
These revival guns were what kindled interest in shooting muzzle loaders and I
became aware of them in visits to the shop of E.M. Farris who was one of the
founders of the NMLRA.They were not high art or anything resembling it but
they would win a shooting match.Some of the later guns were nice but would not get
looked at today. Bill Large supplemented his teachers salary by recutting or "freshing"
the rifling in gun barrels and he usually got $15 for the job.There were others like
Claude Turner and Wynn Woods that also revived long neglected barrels and locks
were usually salvaged as well. New locks from P.I.Spence in Marietta Ohio became
available for about $12 for a caplock but few if any flintlocks were made because
of low interest.A man in Northern Ohio made up a few but they were $35 and no
market for such an expensive lock existed. Mr.Farris had one on display and we
all thought it was fine work but unaffordable.I THINK the maker's name was Korda
but am not sure if that's right and don't know if it's a first or last name.
I don't think anyone from our area had any interest in a flintlock then and I saw my
first new one in Farris's shop in 1953 and it was made by Southgate and it was a
smooth bore.Mr.Farris called me to tell me he had it and Don Thompson and I had
just finished fine tuning a Duesenberg car for a man in WV so we road tested it to
Portsmouth that evening and saw the gun.Back then the car was worth $1600 and it
recently sold for $2.2 million.I think the gun was about $150--maybe.
Memories of times and people long gone,good friends all. Rich,thanks for the prod.
Bob Roller