The article describing a man loading his rifle could truly be an actual account of how ONE man loaded his rifle on ONE occasion. A modern reader would be foolish to believe that this was THE WAY it was done historically by all shooters. Some of what he did is pertinent and some is certainly not my method. Again, it boils down to what one wishes to achieve with his muzzleloading rifle/gun. Personally, while emulating my forebears, I want the best accuracy that I can wring out of my rifle, and have developed a regime to deliver that. I could care less if what I do is exactly like the process of 200 years ago. When I join in a match, if there are fifty competitors, I will see 45 different ways to load a rifle. Again, I could care less. What is important to me is my own enjoyment of the sport and some of that is receiving an award for coming in first. I'm a geezer and not some immortal without fault. But I have to believe that the way in which I load my rifle translates to the recognition I've received all these years.
In the aboveaccount of the shooter, he shakes his head on two occasions while loading. Let me suggest that he has already lost - he doesn't believe in his load. But to completely miss the paper...that's the shooter, not the load or rifle.