I'm early in the process of ruining my Chambers York kit, and have been thinking about which historical guns it resembles so as to keep some styling cues in mind as I go. Now, before I get too far, I should say that I don't intend to make a carbon copy of any historical gun, nor do I have the developed skills to do a refined job of elaborate and super fine details. However, I want to make a fairly "believable" gun and have my eye on some examples to help keep me in line and give me ideas.
Chambers describes this kit as an "early York" gun. To me, George Schroyer is the first one who comes to mind there, and I think this rifle could do a believable Schreyer impersonation in the right hands.
However, I've been thinking the long, slim wrist reminds me somewhat of John Noll - obviously not a York builder, but one with some clear York influence. I probably want to see John Noll there, because he's a favorite builder of mine. However, I don't have a refined eye for details, so I thought I'd ask here - "do you see what I see?" or am I making this up? The buttplate seems appropriate for a nearly Noll gun, although I might want to go with a different triggerguard. The one that came with the kit might work if I put more of a bend in the grip rail. I'd want to do that for a Schroyer-esque gun, as well.
What other historical guns have a similar overall shape to this stock? For reference, I have Kindig's "Thoughts," RCA 1 & 2, Whisker's "Gunsmith's of York County," and the KRA "Kentucky Rifles and Pistols 1750-1850." Let me know if this reminds you of any other historical guns that I should check out.
Also, my kit came with a wood patchbox lid. I haven't totally ruled out going with a brass patchbox, but I'm intimidated by the idea.