I'm no expert but that is probably a wild fowl and small game gun.Rght now,I would try to find out if it's still loaded.Whoever made it did a good job,The lock is typical of many American guns and that mechanism is usually found in flintlocks.Bob Roller
Militia musket assembled using salvaged parts and later converted to percussion? Is it stocked in cherry?
As a guess, I'd go for Abraham Heaton of NYC being the source of the lock, but it could be otherwise! Swinney lists only one very modified gun known by the Heaton family of gunsmithsupload image
They were called "training muskets"in period..light muskets made in Birmingham for sale in America to satisfy the requirements of the militia law. Aside from being cut back at the muzzle and having a bayonet lug they were indistinguishable from inexpensive fowlers. The militia itself was never intended to be embodied, even in wartime, unless the area they came from was invaded. It was a nationwide military training program and each member had to supply his own arms. The contract muskets of regulation pattern were, mostly, held in storage against such an event when provisional units would be raised and armed by the state, the men already having undergone basic military training. I'd say the gun is entirely English made and Heaton was just the retailer. He certainly didn't make the lock...lock making was a highly specialized trade and by the mid-18th century even the best English gunmakers rarely, if ever, made their own locks. It could easily date from the 1820s
There's no holes in the lock plate for a frizzen spring.
Quote from: Hawg on October 05, 2024, 07:37:15 PMThere's no holes in the lock plate for a frizzen spring.I see holes for frizzen pivot bolt and frizzen spring.
I'm certain it was converted. By the time percussion ignition arrived active participation in the mandatory enrolled militia had largely passed. It was still the law but was largely ignored...(I don't think the militia law was actually repealed until 1912 with the act creating the National Guard.) There are percussion militia rifles (I once had one) but those were all volunteer companies made of pf men that wanted militia training. I don't think I've ever seen a made-as-percussion militia musket though it would be presumptuous to say there were none. Also, the features of that musket are a bit archaic even for the early 1820s so I suspect it was made no later than 1822-23. Percussion ignition doesn't seem to have caught hold until about 1825 in sporting guns but, as we know, it was some time before the military adopted it, largely over worry about the supply of percussion caps. It wasn't until there were domestic manufacturers of caps that the military though it safe to adopt the new system.