Steve, Thanks very much for the book recommendation, it sounds right up my alley. I'm going to order it tonight (along with Grinsdale's Flintlock Fowler book). I'm just finishing a book called "The Unredeemed Captive" by John Demos. It's a slightly dry read but well researched and covers an interesting time. It details events in western Massachusetts in the late 1600's surrounding the cycle of warring, raiding, retaliation and captive-taking between the whites and native people. I'm kind of stunned by the scale of hostage-taking in those days. I've always believed that a few children or fit young people might be occasionally taken as targets of opportunity after a raid and adopted into a tribe, but I had no idea that taking dozens, even whole towns-full of captives to Canada for ransom, conversion, or adoption was pretty much a thriving industry and "redeeming" or ransoming them was just a normal part of diplomacy and commerce.
The overarching and relentless theme to me is how continuously uncertain every day existence was.
It was stated above that
" relations with the Iroquois Confederacy were very good at this time, and that the New York frontier was relatively free from conflict. "
With the benefit of hindsight we can see now that that was true, but over and over in these historical narratives are examples where everything was just fine and completely peaceful until one day (or night) when suddenly it completely wasn't. And the people at the time had no way of knowing whether the next moment, or just their next trip out to the well for a bucket of water, might trigger the onset of the next all-out massacre. That's why I expected that any family living out in the frontier would get adequately armed as soon as they could manage to do so. Of course if they were dirt poor and starving that would take longer, but there's another thread on this forum entitled "How much did it cost" with a good discussion of the "quality of life" value of early firearms, and any tool that could prevent your family from being taken from you (and also help feed them) seems like it would be an early priority for any residents of that frontier in those days.
If, as Chris B says, the Germans came from a non gun-owning culture perhaps that effected their decision making too?