Well, here's my best-ever Christmas present. Kentucky made many fine rifles in its central Bluegrass region, with great Bardstown, Lexington, Louisville, Ohio River rifles, etc. But in the more remote regional areas, rifles were much plainer, generally well-made and good shooters, but undecorated. The Barrens School in southwestern Kentucky covers more counties and area than any other KY gunmaking school and was known for guns that were well-made, highly accurate [at least according to locals], but had almost no decoration. The popular Settle rifles of Barren and Green Counties are good examples of Barrens School guns that lacked patchboxes, silver work, and molding lines. At best, a gun might have a small wrist inlay and on rare occasions a capbox.
Recently an exceptional Barrens School rifle came out of a family from Christian County, KY. It is, by far, the most heavily embellished Barrens School rifle known. I was fortunate to acquire it through Jeremiah Johnson Trading Co. of CT, for a great Christmas present [a lot better than what my wife got!]. Photos are courtesy Jeremiah Johnson Trading Co. The rifle was made by Harmon West of Christian Co., KY, who worked with his twin brother, gunsmith William West, at Hopkinsville from about 1835 to 1870. Some may discount the rifle for its back-action lock and later style engraving and appearance, BUT.... this is the ONLY rifle I've seen in over 40 years of collecting from that region of KY with a full patchbox and nicely engraved silver work. Even better, it has all its original finish/surface on both wood and metal, no damage or restoration, and a family provenance to document its history. It's one of those "keepers" at a time when I'm significantly reducing the size of my collection. Hands down, the finest example of a Barrens School rifle I've ever seen. Of course, you have to love Kentucky stuff to really appreciate this slightly later style rifle... but I'm guessing even our eastern collectors might grudgingly admit it's a decent gun. Barrel: 44-1/2" with .40 caliber bore.
Shelby Gallien