In 1999 my father-in -law wanted a muzzleloader to hunt deer with and he wanted to know if I had the parts to build one laying around so I started looking and found enough parts to build this rifle.
My father-in -law was never interested in muzzleloaders until I took him to Friendship in 1992, he watched me win a medal in the X-sticks then went back a couple of times and watched my son shoot, that's when he decided he would like one so we started building. The cherry stock blank was one I bought years before from Roy Keeler the barrel was a CVA second from a barrel of them at the flea market at Friendship, the rest of the parts were just laying around my shop. He wanted to help so I let him band saw out the blank as he was a woodworker, he worked on it one weekend with me. I worked on it evenings and finished the rest without him, but I didn't tell him it was finished, one Sat. he called and wanted to work on it so I told him to come on down , when he walked in he said let's get to work on that gun and I handed it to him finished, boy was he suprised. He is retired Army, Korea, and knows his way around a rifle, we took the rifle to the range and he practically put them all in the same hole at 50 yds. That was a few months before Friendship, well he wanted to take it down and shoot the woodswalk with it so that's excactly what we did, he and another good friend of mine went through and they were both close to 70 and they both cut a card, I thought that was the last time the gun had ever been used.
When we built this he said I would get it back when he was gone, well he succomed to cancer last July and my mother-in-law gave me the gun the day of the funeral, I ran a patch down the barrel and it was perfect, no rust, the patch came out white and I thought he really new how to clean a gun. I put the gun in the gun room, this spring I took it to Friendship thinking my son or I would shoot the woodswalk with it for old times but we didn't. I met this woman who is new to muzzleloading and her husband shoots bench so I have been helping her with her offhand shooting and thought she could shoot the woodswalk with this little rifle. The gun has a single trigger so I put a cap on it to have her try the trigger, when she pulled the trigger the gun went off like it had just been loaded, boy was I ever suprised and embarrased to say the least, she said she was expecting it to go off because I didn't tell her it wasn't loaded . That means my father-in-law did take the gun hunting but he had never mentioned that fact to me, I'm pretty sure if he did it was in the year 2000 so that means the gun had been loaded for almost 9 years. The way things worked out couldn't have been better I've since thought about what could have happened, but I thought he had never used or thought about using that gun and I would never believed it was loaded, you better believe I'll check every gun from now on.
Regards, Steve Chapman