Hi Eric, and thanks much for your studies and posts here. You and Scott play well together in comparing and reinforcing research, and I enjoy the responses from all. It is great to see photos of an old rifle or two with your research – it keeps us visual thinkers engaged through the study of primary records. The coordination between the guns and the records is what was often missing in prior works.
Regarding the appearance of this larger John Rupp rifle, adjusting the trigger and guard certainly change the appearance. Have you traced the outline of the stock profile from this rifle and the other John Rupp – or others for that matter by Herman Rupp, John Moll or Peter Neihardt? How close are they – are they identical, within the width of a chalk line? I somehow thought to ask for stock tracings of the various Oerter rifles and related arms, which really helped to understand (or guess) at how their shop worked with one stock pattern, and the same pattern or very similar was used for rifle # 43, with a bit more step. Comparison of stock patterns might connect some of these stockers.
If they were stocking custom rifles to fit a customer, then the customer may have had a role in style as well as fit. I had noticed from photos that many of these Oerter, later Lehigh and some Bucks Co rifles have a straight top to the wrist. Not something we would naturally shape – we would tend toward smooth curves from tang area into wrist and butt. But the tracings confirmed this – a slight curve in the top of wrist from breech to about the tang bolt, and then straight to the comb. Many contemporary builders miss this detail.
As you and others have mentioned, it seems the old builders had stock patterns hanging on the wall (two in the C’s Spring shop), and just as Wallace Gusler did in his movie, they would trace around the pattern, cut this out to the pattern line, and go to work. I learned longrifle stocking from Jack Brooks – who has patterns traced from many original rifles, and drawings of more. Jack taught me to cut the stock profile to its finished dimension – leaving no extra wood. This way we inlet only once, and don’t have extra wood in the way. On these slimmest rifles like the Hermann Rupp, the height of the wrist is only a good one inch! When you cut a wide stock blank to that finished profile one inch high in the wrist, it looks real scary!
Sidebar - it is interesting how some of these patterns from different makers are either identical - Lancaster stockers for example - or very close, perhaps showing a slight evolution over time. Again might show connections between stockers and shops.
You mention several antique cut out stocks – and we illustrated one in Moravian Gunmaking II – similar to what we would call a precarved stock today, with a rough groove for the barrel and the stock roughly shaped. When the C’s Spring inventories list “cut out gunstocks”, are they talking about planks cut into square stocks following an outline as we would first do with a bandsaw, or do they mean preshaped to some degree?
If John Rupp cut this stock from a pattern, then added the larger lock and longer trigger guard to the already established stock profile, he would get the results this rifle shows. It would handle and feel just the same, even though it looks different. Whether the lock and guard were reused, or older, or just available, the outcome is the same. There are other classic and slim Lehigh rifles with large locks – Jack has taught classes around one original Lehigh with a small barrel and using the Davis large colonial lock to match the original. The combination yields an interesting rifle. I enjoyed Dan’s comment about Ken Netting’s approach, unique to him.
Andreas Albrecht visited Matthias Roesser in Lancaster in early 1763 IIRC, and they may have compared notes on rifle design, stock and carving patterns. It is possible this visit influenced Dickert and others there, until AA moved to nearby Lititz eight years later. Wm Henry traveled a good deal, as did pastors and teachers. The Moravians ran their Wachovia wagons in a loop through the major settlements and down to N Carolina, taking goods and components from Lancaster, and may have sent a finished rifle along. Mr Baer somehow knew to ask young Oerter to stock a rifle for him (of a different pattern and style), when so many talented gunstockers lived close by – including his fellow Mennonites the Newcomer brothers. I believe that many customers for a rifle or other arm cared a good deal about the rifles they admired, and those that they owned. Some Moravian men near Salem NC were very upset to have their rifles taken from them during the Rev War – some had brought these from the old country. There was a strong connection between some men and their arms. Oerter used the term “she” when describing the rifle for Baer – picking up on that connection in promoting his work (as I read it).
By the middle of the Rev War, after taking arms from the non-Associators, and the smiths and stockers working to repair and restock all sorts of gathered arms in the several armories you have written about, they certainly saw the variety of work going on in the colonies. As did the various military units or rifle companies others have mentioned. Christian Oerter became very sick and was not a force by late 1776. Wm Henry, Jr may have stocked a rifle or two, but he was very busy completing a musket contract with the Brethren and an even larger arms repair contract he had on the side. Jacob Loesch, Jr did complete a few rifles for sale with brass patchboxes ca 1780 – but were they a continuation of Oerter’s work? Quite possible since Loesch learned the trade from Oerter, but perhaps Wm Henry, Jr brought the Lancaster daisy box from Albrecht and Lititz?
It is great fun to read and follow your and Scott’s research, and to imagine how this worked from the few records we have. But you find more records all the time. Hope 2022 brings health, happiness and much more new information! Thanks, Bob