Squirrel guns in the 1750s to 70s appear to be most likely small bore fowlers, likely the half inch bore guns sometimes seen in period records.
-"12 guns 1/2 inch bore & 3 feet 9 inches barrel @ 15/" Gill 1771 goods shipped to Garlon Anderson Hanover County by Dobson, Daltera and Walker (Liverpool) Gill Gunsmith in Colonial Virginia p14
John Hook's store sold guns"ones four feet long with half-inch bores or break-off guns..." p56 Buying into the world of goods: early consumers in backcountry Virginia
By Ann Smart Martin
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/01-02-02-0091Thomas Jefferson to Virginia Delegates in Congress, 27 October 1780
Thomas Jefferson
to Virginia Delegates in Congress
RC (NA: PCC, No. 71, I, 495–96). Only the complimentary close and signature are in Jefferson’s hand.
Richmond Octo. 27. 1780
Gentlemen
I must beg the favor of you to Solicit the sending on to us immediately a good supply of Cartridge Paper & Cartouch Boxes.
Nearly the whole of the former Article which we had bought at Alexandria, Baltimore &Ca. and what the Board of War sent from Philadelphia
has been made up and forwarded to the Southern Army: there remains now but a few Ream to make up. I fear we have lost 2000 cartouch Boxes
on the Bay which we had had made at Baltimore Our distress for these is also very great[,] muskets being really useless without them.
I must entreat the greatest dispatch in forwarding these Articles
A very dangerous Insurrection in Pittsylvania was prevented a few days ago by being discovered three days before it was to take place.
The Ring-leaders were seized in their Beds. This dangerous fire is only smothered: when it will break out seems to depend altogether on events.
It extends from Montgomery County along our Southern boundary to Pittsylvania and Eastward as far as James River: Indeed some suspicions have
been raised of it’s having crept as far as Culpepper.2 The rest of the State turns out with a Spirit and alacrity which makes me perfectly happy.
If they had arms there is no effort either of public or private Enemies in this State which would give any Apprehensions[.]
Our whole arms are or will be in the hands of the force now assembling.3 Were any disaster to befall these, We have no other resource but a
few scattered Squirrel Guns, Rifles &C. in the Hands of the western People.I am with the greatest esteem Gentlemen Your most obedt. humble sert
Th: Jefferson
1. This letter was read in Congress on 2 November 1780 together with one of 26 October from Jefferson to President Samuel Huntington. Both letters were “referred to the Board of War, to take order.” A note to this effect by Charles Thomson on the letter of 27 October is followed by the words “Acted upon.” Probably this action did not take the form of sending the supplies requested (Journals of the Continental Congress, XVIII, 1004; Boyd, Papers of Jefferson, IV, 69, 77).
2. Although trouble with Tories in the southwestern counties of Virginia had been endemic since early 1779, their disaffection was especially serious and widespread between March and October of the next year. British agents assisted the Tory leaders to enlarge the unrest in the Virginia and North Carolina back country into a full-scale uprising and possibly to draw in Cherokees as allies. An immediate objective was to gain possession of the patriots’ valuable lead mines in Montgomery County, Va. Colonels William Preston, William Campbell, and Charles Lynch, aided by Colonel Benjamin Cleveland of North Carolina, the victory at King’s Mountain in early October, and harsh punishment meted out to captured Tories, ended most of the overt disloyalty by mid-autumn (Louise Phelps Kellogg, ed., Frontier Retreat on the Upper Ohio, 1779–1781 [Madison, Wis., 1917], pp. 23–26; Maud Carter Clement, The History of Pittsylvania County, Virginia [Lynchburg, Va., 1929], pp. 178–79; Hening, Statutes, X, 324–26; Jameson to JM, 25 November 1780).
3. That is, militia to oppose the British under General Leslie in the Portsmouth neighborhood and to aid Gates’s army in North Carolina.
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October 27, 1768
The Pennsylvania Gazette
PHILADELPHIA, October 27.
On Thursday, the 20th Instant, the Honourable House of ASSEMBLY of the Government of New Castle, Kent and Sussex, upon Delaware, met at New Castle, when JOHN VINING, Esq; was chosen Speaker,
and JAMES SYKES, Esq; Clerk.
One of our Correspondents writes us as follows, viz.
Amwell (New Jersey) October 17, 1768.
"On Wednesday, the 5th Inst. a melancholy Accident happened here,--- On the Afternoon of said Day, Captain DANIEL READING, Son of the Honourable JOHN READING, Esq; late of this Place, deceased,
and two other Gentlemen,
each with his Fowling Piece, charged with small Shot, went out to divert themselves, in the Pursuit of Game in the neighbouring Woods. And they having discovered a Squirrel
on a Tree, one of the Gentlemen presented; but the Object moving, he took down his Piece, and, as he confidently thinks, half cocked it. Whilst they were walking about the Tree, in order again to
discover the Game, the Gun of the Gentleman, who had presented, being in his Hand, accidentally went off, and Captain Reading being at a little Distance, in a Direction nearly straight before the
Muzzle of the Gun, unhappily received the Charge in his Right arm, rather above the Joint of the Elbow, which not only lacerated the Flesh, and fractured the Bone where it struck, but broke it
off short, a little above where it entered. With much Difficulty he go home, in most excruciating Pain, which continued for some Days. Skilful Surgeons were immediately called to his Relief,
who willing, agreeable to his own Desire, and that of his Friends, to use their utmost Endeavours to save his Arm, did not proceed to an Amputation. Little or no Fever ensued,
and after a few Days the Pain abated, and the wounded Part began to suppurate. But notwithstanding many flattering Symptoms of a favourable Issue, yet, on the Morning of the 15th Instant,
he unexpectedly and suddenly expired, without any visible Mortification in the Part, unless livid and blackish Streaks, under his wounded Arm, and on that Side, might be judged Indications of it.
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http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924092232226#page/n473/mode/2upCol.Henry Lee to Col. Davies- Sept 17 1781 Prince Wm Co.
"...besides We were disappointed in getting the 229 stand of Arms form Colo. Peyton's to press the delivery, but he shewed me a Lre. from you forbidding the delivery of Public Arms,
but the order of yr: Board, and said he should put those he had in the hands of his own Miltiia who were ordered on duty & wee without. We have not above
80 guns in the County that are anywise fit
for Service and about as many Squerill Guns. His Excellency has ordered the Fairfax militia who were well Armed on the same fatigue..."
“Most of us had only
fowling pieces and squirrel guns. Dunmore having gone on board of a British Man-of-war, half of the minute men were discharged.”
Greene, Raleigh Travers. Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County. Virginia. Embracing a Revised and Enlarged Edition of Dr. Philip Slaughter's History of St. Marks Parish. Culpeper, VA, 1900.
The Pennsylvania Gazette, April 8, 1762, JAMES HARDING, At his store in Front and Arch streets,
has imported … “a parcel of neat cocking and squirrel pieces.”