Miller Lamb. He was the last blacksmith working in the nuclear weapons plant in Oak Ridge Tennessee. He had a number of old "hog rifles" (as Miller called them) and a couple he had made. He had not made the barrel, but had rebored and rerifled it. He made the files with which he made the lock. Of course, he forged the trigger guard and butt plate.
Miller loaned Chuck and I an old rifle. It had forged furniture such. We hand hammered a lead ball to fit the bore, made a mould from dental plaster and made balls to fit. We shot the rifle a number of times. It and been made by a man named Bean from Strawberry Plains, I think. Can you imagine shooting a Bean? What is it worth today?
I have several antique powder cans. He sold them to me full and I shot the powder out of them.
Miller got us out of all sorts of scrapes. The worst was when I got the breech plug galled in a rifle barrel. He told me to leave it and he will see what he can do. Of course, he sawed the breach end off and forged a new plug and installed it.
ne of the double barrels I spoke about earlier had a broken hammer. Miller welded the cast iron hammer with a torch. That was all he would use. I have been told a number of times cast iron cannot be welded, but they didn't know Miller.
Chuck had a piece of barrel he bought from Turner for a couple of dollars. I think it was the first 22 inches off a Spencer rifle someone had converted to a carbine. Miller brazed a bolster on the side and put in a breech plug. Chuck killed a deer with it years later. It is a tiny short Kentucky rifle. We were teenagers then, but he still has it. I have pretty much sold all of mine to buy something else.