Buck,
I'll take a couple close-ups of the many incised lines on the stock, an odd detail, like some of the other details. Two other details that point toward Stoudenour, IMO as they like to say, are: 1) the thin, close-to-the-edge single line border around his patchbox edges and piercings, and 2) he cuts his butt's incised lines through the butt plate edge, but ONLY on the back side of the gun... which seemed to be common to Stoudenour's work. I also think the cheek shape, with its single mold line slightly angled toward the front, and the long, curving line coming off the rear of the cheek, follow his traditional patterns pretty closely. The gunmaker was well experienced, because the shaping treatment around the nose of the comb, as well as around the rear pipe, is almost relief carved and very finely done... to me the work of an older, experienced gunsmith.
I'm not an expert on PA rifles, just an enthousiast, but for those who do not think this is a late Stoudenour rifle made with more commercial parts than his earlier rifles, can you provide an alternative maker for this rifle, one with these same details and similar style J * S initials on the barrel? That's what drives me to Stoudenour. Easy to critique a somewhat "different" rifle, but hard to find another maker who fits the details and initials. When a non-standard gun pops up, I think it's better to attribute it on what details you can identify on the gun, rather than what details you can't. I'm not aware of other Bedford-area makers with the initials of J S who signed barrels like Stoudenour did, with a small 6-point start between letters, star made with long axis and short/small "x" in the middle. So if not Stoudenour, then who?
??
More close-up photos of some key "artistic" details later this evening.
Shelby Gallien