I'd sure love to see an inventory of everything Ressel bought from the shop. I always wondered if they had a stock duplicating machine because having worked at Harpers Ferry Arsenal they perhaps would have be quite familiar with using one.
This is little off topic, but since you raised the question in your own thread...Charles Hanson, Jr. in his book
The Hawken Rifle: Its Place In History goes to some length to make the point that the Hawken brothers ran a relatively small gun shop and not a sizable factory operation. Hanson (page 20) cites the first manufacturing census of St. Louis in 1850 with statistics of Sam Hawken's operation:
- $1,000.00 invested in the business
- previous year used
- 2,000 ft of lumber
- 1 ton of iron
- 520 pounds of steel
- 2,200 pounds of charcoal
- 50 pounds of brass
- costing a total of $500.00
- employed four hands at a total monthly payroll of $120.00
- year's production had been 100 rifles and 20 shotguns worth total of $2,700.00
- all work was done by hand [emphasis added]
It doesn't seem likely that they could have justified the expense of a stock duplicating machine to build 100 rifles per year.
Then there is the question of power to run such a machine. Their shop was located near the river, but there is no indication that it was close enough to utilize water power. The picture below is of the shop during J. P. Gemmer's ownership, and the shop had other locations earlier, but it appears to be located close to retail shops such as a furniture store and a hardware store down the street--not in an area being supplied by water power.
Hawken Rifle Factory, St. Louis, Missouri, circa 1860s-1870sSteam engines were available by the late 1830s, but with only $1,000 investment in the business by 1850, it doesn't seem likely that it included the cost of a steam engine and a stock duplicating machine.
If the census data did include a reference that "all work was done by hand", and I have no reason to assume that Hanson misrepresented the report, then that alone seems to rule out any use of powered machinery.