Am I crazy or dd the thread vanish?
Anyway since the subject was broached, is there documentation of Heinnerich Fessler being in Lancaster? I'm not up on all the Lancaster research via tax lists, church records etc. so I'd certainly be interested to know. I am aware of the Henrich Fesler that arrived in 1733, and Dave M (who I believe was the author of the now-vanished posting) had quite a while back found an interesting reference in online records of Baden-Wurttemburg which were posted online but now do not seem to exist. There was a record of an action taken by Christpher Schaller (sp?) in Wertheim against a 'Heinrich Fesler buchsenmacher' sometime in the early 18th century - unfotunately I can't seem to access the record anymore but I believe it was maybe ca. 1710-1720 or so, so he could either be the same guy who arived in 1733 or maybe he had a son who also was trained in gunstocking? Maybe Dave can find it again - the old link to the records no longer works.
So do we know fr certain there was a Johan Heinrich Fesler of some spelling in Lancaster for certain? The musician rifle lock is signed with the "I" for the J in Johan before the Heinerrich Fesler signature but the "I" is hidden under the cock when it is at rest. I'm going to assume that by placing him in Lancaster, the author of the book has some concrete period documentation?
I'm sure he was probably signing his work "John" right? So I'd assume that's the signature on the barrel. John Fesler.
About the Rock Ford rifle, it's certainly got what we would expect of the right architecture for an early Dickert-style or Lancaster-style rifle, maybe pre-War, although the attribution to "ca. 1770" seems a bit early to my mind for a fully developed daisy box with side plates. Maybe the box is a replacement for a wood lid? I don;t know, but I don;t think anyone has ever proposed that the 4-piece daisy box was fully developed by "ca. 1770."
I'm guessing the thread for some reason was yanked because of the photos? So no photos. Let's not anger the photo gods.