Photos of this Savannah, GA 'mixed parts' musket previously submitted in the
Contemporary Longrifle Collecting forum (Colonial muskets of the AWI) provided information from Mike Brooks, that the trigger guard came from a Belgian or Dutch trade gun ca.1720-1740. My assumption had always been that this part was of English origin, which, in fact, was wrong. That reveal now prompts me to try to better identify the other four (4) primary components of this musket: Lock - Front Band - Barrel - Ram rod.
Lock: Dated 1763, however the engraved name in the rear panel is somewhat obscure. Can someone positively identify the maker? 'T LORD' - 'C LORD' - 'E LORD' are possibilities. Was this a trade lock approved for export, or a lock salvaged from an early model Brown Bess? Savannah and the colony of Georgia were only 30 years old at that date in time.
Front Band: Obviously French military, but of what year? Any sight on the rear band has been worn-off, or removed long ago. I'd assumed that the brazed seam was required to either adapt this part to a .75 British military barrel (the French arm being of .69 caliber), or a later repair.
Barrel: My notes record it as being a .75 caliber and ~46 inches in length. My assumption is it British, based on their adherence to the .75 caliber, the ~46 inch length and the 'pinned' barrel lugs which are all 'Brown Bess-ish' features. The stamps at the breech, are almost if not entirely illegible. I also assume that the bayonet lug was relocated to the bottom because it would have interfered, at the time, with the sight on the French upper band (now missing entirely). Is the barrel British? Can the stamps be better identified? Was the bayonet lug relocated, or evidence of the barrel being of other foreign origin, like the trigger guard?
Ramrod: My assumption is that it is a early British Brown Bess steel ramrod. Or, is it French? The forged jag on the end of the ramrod I've always assumed was a Colonial modification and/or militia requirement. Perhaps the shape of the head on the ramrod, even in its present state, can lead to a better identification. As far as I can tell, the length of the ramrod had not been modified.
While the butt stock appears, to me, to be distinctly British in profile, perhaps if this musket could talk, it might be able to tell me why the gunsmith/armorer/stocker would elect to use the French banded stock design when the barrel already had lugs intended for pinning it to the stock? In alternative, the lugs, which penetrate the stock web, were skillfully adapted to provide just enough tension against the steel ramrod to very reliably hold it in place. It appears to be adding unnecessary complication to what are otherwise simple, straight-forward and recognized British musket building techniques of the period - but there it is.
The whole musket is a question, but perhaps a few more of them can find an answer amongst the membership here.