ADDENDUM TO THE WOLFGANG HAGA MONOGRAPH
Recent information found regarding the six rifles with “Reading”
engraved on the patchbox lid.
In October of 2021, six rifles attributed to Berks County gunsmiths were on display at the Eastern Pennsylvania Long Rifle Show in Morgantown, Pennsylvania. Each of the rifles show the wording “Reading” engraved on the patchbox in a similar style and size of typeface. The rifles shown were not by the same gunsmith, nor were they made in the same year, albeit they were Reading style rifles from the late 1700s to 1820 period.—none were signed by the gunsmith.
These rifles may have been those owned by members of the Reading Rifles, a group of quasi-militia famous for celebrations of military events, holding public shooting matches, and parade marching in Berks County in the mid to late 1800s, while serving as citizen soldiers defending the general public. This militia was formed to honor the original company of riflemen from Reading, also called the Reading Rifles, which served with General Washington at Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1775.
This recognition of the Colonial Reading riflemen may have been created in 1849 by Sydenham Anacona and his Brother in-law, Daniel Feger, both officers of the Reading Railroad. The group’s original members were engineers and machinists of the Reading Railroad Company, which eventually grew to include over fifty uniformed members, calling themselves the Reading Rifles. It is my opinion that each of these six rifles were owned and later engraved “Reading” by members of that group.
During the period just before and after the Civil War, fraternal citizen soldier groups were popular with the public and many areas in Pennsylvania formed such groups. The Ringold Light Artillery was another military-like group in Reading, while the Buchanan Rifles was active in Lancaster during the same period. These groups were patterned after Philadelphia’s Old Guard State Fencibles established in 1813 and all such quasi-militias eventually evolved into today’s National guard.
From the monograph, Wolfgang Haga - Study of a Reading Gunsmith. ©2021 Patrick Hornberger
My humble opinion above, although I found no specific reference to "guns being engraved, "Reading".
By the way, there are two rifles by Bonewitz with "Womelsdorftown" engraved on the patchbox lid - albeit not in a similar hand.
Patrick Hornberger