Both are very nice. I really like the top one! The horn nose cap is interesting. The lower one shows some eastern middle Tennessee influence. You can see the transition away from some of the East Tennessee features. I’ve always appreciated Alfred Bearden. As we’ve discussed, the site of his shop is roughly 17 miles due north of me. He was a Mason. His son was an officer and was killed in middle Tennessee at the battle of Stone River. Alfred was never the same afterward.
There is a marker nearby with this inscription. Born 1811 in South Carolina, a farmer, Renowned Gunsmith and a Past Master of Andrew Jackson Lodge #68 F & AM. Grandson of Revolutionary War Veteran John Bearden, Sr. Married in 1831 to Margaret Downing, buried at this site with four of their eleven children, two who served in the 8th Tennessee Infantry Reg't during the War Between the States, including his son, Captain N. M. Bearden who died due to wounds received at the Battle of Stones River on Dec. 31, 1862.