John Lawson's A New Voyage to Carolina (1709) reports that "I have known an Indian stock Guns better than most of our Joiners, although he never saw one stock'd before; and besides, his Working-Tool was only a sorry Knife."
Lawson also records that "When they have bought a Piece, and find it to shoot any Ways crooked, they take the Barrel out of the Stock, cutting a Notch in a Tree, wherein they set it streight, sometimes shooting away above 100 Loads of Ammunition, before they bring the Gun to shoot according to their Mind."
I've recently come across another reference to a Native American stocker, but cannot find it now--but will add it here when I do.
Has anybody come across other instances of indigenous men stocking guns?
It's noteworthy, I think, that Native Americans throughout the eighteenth-century regularly requested (sometimes demanded) a smith--a metalworker--to repair their arms as part of trade and diplomatic negotiation with settlers and governments. But I don't ever recall a need for a stocker (woodworker) expressed in these negotiations, which I've always wondered about. Stocks, like locks and barrels, must have needed repair.
Could it be that, while most Native men would not be trained in metalwork, they would have had the skills to stock, even if roughly, a gun?