I have enjoyed reading the many posts and responses on this topic for the last week. Most of you know that I have spent the last two years writing an upcoming book on the Moravian gunsmiths who worked in the Wachovia Tract. During this time I have had many interesting discussions on the work of these early gunsmiths in North Carolina with people I think are very knowledgeable on the subject at hand.
I have learned there are several competing theories on who made RCA #42, and where it was made. The more I learn, the more questions I have, and the less I know for sure. (laughs)
Eric Kettenburg and Steve Hench (who once owned the rifle) both believe the rifle was made in Pennsylvania.
Wallace Gusler believes it was made in North Carolina by John Valentine Beck.
Mel Hankla and Frank House were kind enough to provide me a copy of their unpublished manuscript "Origins." In this they examine the early important rifles made and used in the Cumberland Gap region of Tennessee and Kentucky, made by Thomas Simpson and Jacob Young, were based on techniques that both men learned working in Rowan County, N.C., before they moved west. Their theory is these gunsmiths were influenced by Andreas Betz, who moved to Rowan County in 1767, after he married Barbara Bruner, (daughter of Rowan gunsmith Henrig Bruner.) Betz was the first locksmith/gunsmith sent down to the Wachovia Tract by the Moravian's. He arrived in Bethabara in 1754. Hankla & House (sounds like a law firm) have put forth the theory that Andreas Betz was the maker of RCA #42.
So, who is right? I have no idea. A rifle would both need to be signed and dated to know for sure who made it, and where.
The fact is Andreas Betz worked in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, but there is no documentation he was trained as a gun stocker. The same goes for Joseph Muller. Both primarily worked as lock-smiths repairing rifles during their time in Wachovia. Betz did open a gun shop in Salisbury after he moved there in 1767, and did train his younger brother George Betz and orphan Peter Crouse as gunsmiths in Rowan.
John Valentine Beck was trained as a gunsmith in Germany, and worked in that trade in Pennsylvania, before moving to Wachovia. He was the master gunsmith from 1764 to 1775, when the gun shop closed due to the Revolution.
Jacob Loesch, Jr. was born in Wachovia, moved to Pennsylvania as a child with his family, trained as a gunsmith there, became master gunsmith at Christian's Spring, and then moved to Salem, North Carolina on December 18, 1781. He arrived to find the gun shop was still closed and was not allowed to open it until March 1783. On August 25, 1784, Christoph Vogler was bound to him as an apprentice for a term of five years. Loesch did not fit in well in Salem and was asked to leave the town and congregation on May 1, 1787.
It is unfortunate there are no signed rifles that still exist by Andreas Betz, Joseph Muller, John Valentine Beck, or Jacob Loesch, Jr. We are lucky the Moravian's were such great record keepers so we do know a lot about their early years in this state and their trade system.
We are also blessed to have many wonderful eagle patchbox rifles made by Christoph Vogler and the other members of his extended family who worked in Salem and Salisbury making ornate longrifles.
It is my plan that my new book, "
The Longrifle Makers of the Salem School" will be in print in the next three months. I have photographed 66 Salem School rifles and 12 additional rifles that were made by gunsmiths in neighboring schools who were influenced by the Vogler's.
Thanks,
Michael Briggs