For those who like Tennessee rifles with curly maple stocks and great architecture, a fresh rifle probably made by Alfred Bearden just appeared in central Tennessee. The gun is rather dark and dirty but otherwise all there. Despite being half-stocked, the gun was originally flint. The "Fall & Cunningham/Nashville TN" lock plate was originally flint, there is a vent pick hole in the toe, and a clearance cut for a flint hammer above the lock plate. Typical four ramrod pipes, barrel is 43-1/4 inches long with a worn .38 caliber bore... probably smaller when new since rifling is almost gone. The gun is not signed, but the distinctive guard, triggers with small tabs at bottom, strong butt/comb architecture, small diamond lock bolt washer, and superior curly maple stock wood all scream Alfred Bearden's work. This rifle also has a horn nose cap which looks original; I've never seen a horn nose cap on a Bearden rifle before. The cheek also differs a little from Bearden's "standard" short, pronounced cheek with single line across bottom. Only loss is the last/outer ramrod pipe. All pipes are iron on this gun. Photos have been lightened slightly to show detail a little better, since the gun is rather dark.
ADDED NOTE 12-16-23: One reason for posting this rifle is that, despite looking very much like the work of Alfred Bearden, the different cheekpiece and horn nose cap raise a question in my mind. Can it be someone else's work, and if so, who else was working at that time and using many of Alfred's details? The only candidate I can come up with is Alfred's older brother, Pleasant Bearden, but I've never seen his work to know how close it is to Alfred's work.
Shelby Gallien