Hey Guys,
Plenty of really sub par guns were sold in North America to Natives (as well as in Africa).
“...Paris, the Trader, who is at the Head of those People, and can, I'm persuaded, get him to visit and assist us with more or less of his People,
except when they may be put on some Expedition or partiuclar Service from Virginia; but have not taken the Libery even of writing to that Gentlman on the Subject, until I have your Honour's Authority for so doing. I am informed that on their coming over Potowmack, Commissary Ross rode Express to the Governor of Maryland; Thier Arms were said to be of the worst sort of Sale Guns with painted Stocks, and that they wou'd fondly have had an Exchange of some Rifles that were among our People. the Indian Captn was gratified and got a rifle from one of the soldiers.” (Colonel John Armstrong to the Executive Council, Carlyle, 5 May 1757, [concerning 60 Cherokees under the Direction of "Capt Paris (a Trader in their Nation)" Minutes of the Provincial Council From the Organization to the Termination of the Proprietary Government volume 7 page 505).
http://books.google.com/books?id=EYJuAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA234&dq=conrad+weiser+captain+bull&hl=en&sa=X&ei=DARIT7CCCoLu0gG--oCHDg&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA#v=snippet&q=bull&f=falseCharles Frederick Post 1759
"Captain Bull shot a squirrel, and broke his gun. I cut fire wood, and boiled some chocolate for supper. The others came home, and brought nothing..."
p248
"Colonel Bouquet set out for Loyalhannon: The Indians got some liquore between ten and eleven o'clock. One Mohock died; the others fired guns three times over him; at the last firing one had accidentally loaded his gun with a double charge: this gun burst to pieces, and broke his hand clean off; he also got a hard knock on his brest; and in the morning at nine o'clock he died, and they buried them in that place, both in one hole....
one of the ways a gunmaker could save money was by proofing or not- as well as final bore reaming. Following quote is from Richards, W. (1980). The Import of Firearms into West Africa in the Eighteenth Century. The Journal of African History, 21(1), 43-59- and you can see that astute customers/markets in both America and Africa wanted London proved barrels (the "Ketch" muskets are dog locks by the way).
"Farmer and Galton's records, however, provide conclusive evidence that most of the cheapest guns for the African trade were poorly finished and that their barrels were likely to burst on firing as they were neither bored at the nose nor were they proved. The badness of English guns became so well known between 1749 and 1750 along the West African coast, that traders had difficulty in trading with English guns.
3 5 Farmer and Galton supplied the cheapest guns for the African trade, Catch Trading guns, ·"got up in the common way without proof. "
Most of these cheapest guns, the Catch Trading guns, were not proved, though they were proved on request at an extra cost of
1s. for each gun proved.40 ~~e proving of Catch Trading guns was so unusual that James Farmer gave precise instructions to Samuel
Galton on how an order for 300 Catch Trading guns should be proved in 1748.
41 He wrote, "I would have you prove 300 Trading barrels but must have a ball the size of the bore and done to see them
proved.1142 Farmer and Galton usually bore these cheap guns at the nose which added 1s. to the cost of making 20 Catch Trading guns.43
Other gunmakers were able to lower their prices by leaving out this finishing process of boring at the nose.44
The profit margin on the cheapest guns for the African trade was very small and could only be maintained by most gunmakers by
reducing the finishing processes on the guns to a minimum. ....Many of Farmer and Galton's customers in
the African trade requested careful proving for their guns, especially for the more expensive guns like the Birding and Danish guns. Slave traders often gave precise instructions on the proving and finishing of the guns which they ordered. In 1754 IParmer and Galton received an order for 700 Angola muskets which should have "very neat, stout barrels, proof'marked, and the nose of the barrels
clear bored as far down as can be. ,A9 "
DeWitt Baily's article The Wilsons: Gunmakers to Empire (American Society of Arms Collectors 2002 Bulletin p85/11) lists these purchase prices from Wilson from the papers of Falmouth
Va merchant William Allason from 1761:
12 trading Guns London proved Barrels, white stocks & c 8/-
12 ditto better sort with spotted stocks & c 10/6
A lot of these English makers made all kinds of stuff at different price points. Contrast the Bumford trade fusil with the Fowling gun Colonial Williamsburg has up in the arms gallery at the DeWitt Wallace Museum.
Richards, W. (1980). The Import of Firearms into West Africa in the Eighteenth Century. The Journal of African History, 21(1), 43-59.
"As S. Galton wrote in 1757,'The guns made for Africa are of many different sorts according to the different parts of the Coast they are designed', and he gave the following list:
Cheap guns in the African Trade s.d.
Catch Trading for the Winward and Gold Coasts 6s.8d.
Round Muskets. 7s0d
Square Muskets 7s2d
Bonny Guns 7s0d
Angola Guns 7s0d
Winward Muskets 7s4d
Better quality guns in the African Trade s.d.
Plain Birding guns 10s0d
Carved Birding Guns 11s0d
Jamaica Guns (Beech or Walnut Stocks) 9s6d
Dutch Guns (Made to Dutch Pattern) 10s6d to 11s0d
Danish Guns 12s6d
Buccaneer Guns 9s6d
Spanish Guns 10s6d
Swivel Blunderbusses 15s to 18s0d
GP 405/2 January 1757
so both the African and American markets had cheap $#@*, and both had discerning customers that wanted higher quality proofed arms.