I bought this little rifle in 1974 in a gun shop in Vancouver, BC for $40,,,it was missing its hammer and ramrod. When I got it home, I discovered it was .38 cal. and had a load still in the bore, which was in horrific shape with rust and neglect. When I extracted the load, I found a short slug and some very shiny black powder. In those days, as now, I am more of a shooter than a collector, so I whittled out a hammer for it, made a ramrod from a broken 5/16" rod I had in my stash, and went to work to improve the bore.
To that end, I bought a new drill bit, attached it to a long straight piece of drill rod, and in my buddy's lathe, bored out the old bore down to the breech plug. Daryl gave me a brand new 13/16" x .36 cal Green Mountain barrel which I turned down to fit the drilled out barrel, slathered epoxy over the new liner, and slid it into the old barrel. I was pleasantly surprised at how well the new-to-me rifle shot, but I had to replace the back sight as the original was far too low.
The rifle weighs just short of five pounds, 4.972 pounds to be exact. The percussion lock plate is 4" long, the lop is 14 1/2" and there is 1/2" of cast off in the English walnut stock. There is no cheek piece. The forend tip is buffalo horn.
Shooting this rifle is a treat. There is insufficient drop in the stock so one has to scrunch down hard on the comb to see the sights, but it is a tack driver, and as Daryl has mentioned, we have harvested quite a number of snowshoe hares with it. Here's a few pics taken a few minutes ago with my i phone ...