While everyone is supposed to be sheltering in place, I thought I would give you something fun to look it from my collection.
I purchased this longrifle from a friend in 2015. It is one of my favorites.
We believe it was made by David Kennedy around 1811 for E. Stewart, who the Kennedy family hired to teach their children.
One of the strong features on North Carolina longrifles is silver worked into brass. This rifle is a great example of that. The rifle has 23 pieces of coin silver on it, many of them worked into brass.
The rifle features a silver edelweiss patchbox finial. It is one of only two North Carolina rifles I have seen with an edelweiss finial, both are from the Bear Creek School. I normally associate rifles with this finial to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
My favorite feature on the rifle is the Comet inlay on the comb of the rifle. Their was a famous Comet in the year 1811, that was visible with the naked eye for ten months in the eastern U.S. I have read, at its apogee, the Comet had a visible tail. Tecumseh, the Pawnee war chief used this Comet as a sign to the Creek and Chickasaw Indians they needed to join his Confederacy to make war on the whites who were moving west into their lands.
I hope you enjoy the photos.
It is my belief that this edelweiss and the silver eagle on the John Vogler Salem rifle are the two most artistic patchbox finials to be found on North Carolina rifles.
When John Alexander Kennedy moved to the Sandhill's in Moore County, N.C. in the 1760's, he helped found a community named "Mechanic's Hill". This is where the Kennedy's built their gun factory. Later the community changed it's name to "Hemp." Please note the Hemp leaves carved on both sides of the lock mortise.
The community then changed names again to "Robbins." This is the name engraved on the lock plate, but I assume that is the name of an English lock maker and is just a coincidence.
Here is the Comet inlay.
The sideplate is unlike any other found on a Kennedy Rifle.
The rifle does not have a cheek rest, the button on the rear is the patchbox release. This feature is common on Bear Creek School rifles.
Toe plate inlay
Trigger guard.
Thumb piece engraved with E. Stewart's name.
D. Kennedy