Eric and all, I had shoulder replacement surgery last week, so am coming late to this discussion.
In 1777 and 1778, Jacob Dickert owed the CS gunshop for a few rifle barrels the shop supplied him, and there is an item with Albrecht. But in my study of these outstanding debts, no other gunstockers, and nothing before the Rev War. More Indian Brethren as customers in 1760's, but more whites in 1770's as the Indians were pushed west. As you say, there were not many other gunsmiths in the vicinity.
I think this inventory of wood planks and cut out stocks was for the CS gunshop only - not for retail or trade to others. But the large number might include some % which were dry and ready to go, and rest in stages of drying? Yes, they knew the wood business as part of their trade. Immediately after arriving at Bethlehem in 1750, Albrecht was out looking for walnut and maple trees for gunstocks. Another settlement near CS mentioned occasionally finding curled maple logs, which were coveted by the gunstocker over at the Spring. So when a good log of stock wood was found, Oerter and the sawmill guys probably got together.
The CS gunshop was built in Aug 1763, and Albrecht had only one apprentice - Oerter. When Albrecht moved away in Nov 1766, Oerter was on his own for a bit, then took Levering as an apprentice, and years later, added Loesch. This was always a very small shop, with no fleet of apprentices to cut up planks, etc.
I wrote an article about 3 day rifles a while back - Jack Brooks stocked a complete rifle from blank in less than 3 days - no pbox or carving, but complete and finished. Three of us in his small shop cranked out a bunch of long guns and pistols in a few weeks for the last Alamo movie. We don't know what the demand was over time, but Oerter seemed to have developed name recognition over a large area by 1773, when this wood was cut. Two trained men and a new apprentice could knock out quite a few guns, either new stocked or restocked, plus repair - IF the demand was there. Oerter contracted to stock 500 muskets, died early and Wm Henry took over, and it appears that 200 were delivered in a very short time. That is cranking out the guns. We need more info, but thanks a bunch to Scott for all his discoveries, which add to our understanding.
Re hiring non-Moravian help, not at CS. Eric, when you refer to that in NC, I think it is with C Vogler and those after him, so maybe 1785 or later? The CS gunshop was very busy until about 1780, when the work shifted south, Henry moved to Nazareth and work really slowed down. The shop was more or less closed ca 1787, before this idea of outside labor was considered. Weiss may have sold off some stock towards the end, but I don't see any trade with outsiders before that time.
Thanks for a fine thread, and please keep looking, Scott! Bob