Kent,
As the author of the bulletin article, a few notes:
My article is written purely based on what I, and a few others, could find as historical fact from first hand sources (not old books, second hand info, etc). I intentionally tried to avoid the whole question of attributions, that was not what the article was intended for. And if I speculated at all about something in the article, I did my best to state that I am speculating. I do not own a Reading made rifle, and I was only interested in the history. It doesn't matter to me how Hachen spelled his name, my only interested was getting it correct. I have found that no matter what people may believe, when all the facts are known on a subject, the truth is usually the most interesting story. There is plenty more to be discovered here!
That said, the intent of the story was to point out who the "probable" rifle makers were for a given period in Reading colonial and early post war history. If we assume a rifle was made in a given year, in downtown Reading, there are only so many makers in downtown Reading at that particular time who could have made it.
Excluding John Kerlin who lived outside of Reading but had an association with the Reading makers for government contracts, and excluding Henry Hahn Sr. since we have not yet found proof he made guns, look at the following for examples of eligible makers in a given time:
- A rifle made in Reading in 1750 or 1751: Hachen appears to have been the first and only maker in town.
- ditto 1752: the only makers in town were Hachen, Graeff. Young new guy starting out was Graeff who was only 20-years old then, and probably trained with Hachen for at least a short time (speculation but makes sense to me).
- ditto 1755: Hachen, Graeff, Schreit. The new guy in Reading was Schreit by 1755 or 1756.
- ditto 1760: Hachen, Graeff, Schreit.
- ditto 1765: Hachen, Graeff, Schreit. New guy was Schroyer by 1763, left town by 1770
- ditto 1770: Hachen, Graeff, Schreit, New guys starting on their own were John Reiffsnyder, William Shener Sr.. Reiffsnyder trained with Graeff.
- war years 1775: Hachen, Graeff, Schreit (moved out of Reading around this time), Reiffsnyder, William Shener Sr., Henry Hahn Jr., Anthony Bobb, possibly Christian Balsely (Balsely likely trained with Hachen), John Eister.
- war years 1780: Hachen, Graeff, Reiffsnyder, William Shener Sr., Hahn Jr., Bobb, John Drinkel, Andrew Fichthorn Sr., possibly John Gonter, Charles Witz, possibly Christian Balsely, John Eister.
- post war 1785: Hachen likely stopped building after the war - he was last noted as a gunsmith in the 1782 tax list. 1782 is also the year that my ancestor Nicholas Madary died. I speculate based on common land ownership and other interests that the two worked together. Hachen was noted as blind by 1789 and I speculate his blindness was a progressive disease that started after the war. Still active in 1785 were Graeff, Reiffsnyder, William Shener Sr., Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Witz.
- post war 1790: Graeff, Reiffsnyder, William Shener Sr., Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Witz.
- post war 1795: Graeff, William Shener Sr., Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Witz, John Shener new guy starting out.
- post war 1800: Graeff (may have retired by then but still noted as gunsmith), William Shener Sr., Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Fichthorn Jr., Witz, John Shener, William Shener Jr.
- post war 1805: Graeff probably was retired. William Shener Sr., Drinkel. Fichthorn Sr., Fichthorn Jr., John Shener, William Shener Jr.
- post war 1810: Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Fichthorn Jr., John Shener, William Shener Jr.
- post war 1815-1820: Drinkel, Fichthorn Sr., Fichthorn Jr., William Shener Jr.
Using the above as a baseline, you can start to draw your own conclusions for any attributions based on the process of elimination - by that, I mean there are signed examples of Fichthorn rifles for example that are different than typical "Reading" style. But until more rifle examples come to light that have some sort of (hopefully genuine) marking, With what I know currently, I personally would not be able to tell you a Drinkel rifle from a Shener rifle from a Graeff rifle from an early Pannebacker rifle, nor can anyone else unless someone has a signed gun. We also cannot forget there were a handful of rifle makers that worked in Berks county just outside the town of Reading like Pannebecker that are candidates for "Reading" type rifles.
What has become evident through this work is that "LOTS" of early rifles were made in Reading. I have no doubt in my mind that quite a few must have survived just by the sheer number that were made. Just one example, when John Reiffsnyder died in 1793, he had numerous locks and other rifle parts outlined in his estate.