I am new to this forum and long rifle building. I want to build a long rifle that has some heritage/family significance. I can trace my family back to 1768, a farm called greenfield at Clinchburg near Saltville Washington County Virginia.
I would like to build a rifle that would have been appropriate for that time and location. I have the recommended books from this website( Ehrig, Buchele, Shumway, Alexander, Kindig) somewhere I saw a chart that showed long rifles by county but I can't find it.
If anybody could point me in the right direction, perhaps you know of the chart or may have info on how I can identify an appropriate long rifle.
Thanks,
Owen
Any early Virginia rifle would be OK.
School's for longrifles are just guides and perhaps even guesses in some cases. An unsigned rifle of one school or another might have been built in some place where it is now thought to "wrong" by some apprentice or journyman or master who shifted location and made the rifle he was used to making.
I would look at Gusler's video on carving a Kentucky Rifle, it concerns VA rifles. Rifles may be a little late and plenty fancy. Smoothbores were common but rifles were plently popular on the frontier especially from PA on south, more so than farther east so there is an excellent chance your forebears had some rifles even in 1760. The natives had them 15-20 years earlier in PA.
RCA124 is OK I guess but the ergonomics leave a lot to be desired from a shooters standpoint. Looks like a cheek biter to me.
The Haymaker rifle, 131, would be a guide as well and I like it better. I could easily date to the late 1760s. Years ago people were dating rifles 20-30 years too early and now we are dating them 10-20 years too late but that's just my opinion. The Haymaker has a pretty firm date for being in actual use in 1774 IIRC.
Since Haymaker was making rifles in 1753 we can assume (or not I suppose) they were likely at least similar to 131 *if* it was really made by that maker.
Better close off before I get in any more trouble.
Dan