Here is one to consider:
This pouch, with its contents and accoutrements and a Lehigh styled rifle, belonged to one David Cooke. The whole shebang was written up on the Contemporary Makers Blogspot, along with this photo and some additional pictures of the rifle. Here is a link:
Rifle & Hunting Pouch Cariied By David CookeBriefly, Mr. Cooke was a full-time professional hunter, listed on the tax records for Norristown, Pennsylvania between 1780 and 1842. These were the tools of his trade.
I don't really know Pennsylvania geography. I looked up Norristown, and it is apparently in Montgomery county. I don't know where Allentown is in relation to that. In any event, this looks like a pretty big pouch. The attached powder horn suggests it was indeed used as a hunting pouch or shot pouch, but considering its size and the amount and variety of accoutrements carried in it, this pouch must have been used in much the same way the German hunters used their game bags. For more on this, see Frederick Gerstaecker's
Wild Sports and Adventures in the Far West. On page 126, he described his "...game-bag, which was filled with all possible sorts of things," and on page 186 he stated that "... I had one spare shirt in my game-bag, with a pair of rather woful [sic] looking socks, a small cord, a bullet mould, and a few bits of lead." He mentioned the game-bag frequently in the book. The point being, I guess, that hunters who spent a lot of time in the woods away from home might carry a lot more than just shooting supplies in their pouches.
Back to David Cooke's pouch, it looks essentially pretty simple, and very plain. I don't think it should be too hard to replicate, either full-sized, or in a slightly reduced-size version.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob