Northmn and The Other DWS,
Thanks for the explanation on "overseasoning." As I have always understood it, gunstock wood (at least walnut) is supposed to retain between 6 and no more than 9 or 10 percent moisture content. I can see how drying it out too much would harm it.
On the use of walnut in U.S. military arms. Straight grained walnut was always the choice of U.S. arsenals from 1795 to beyond WWII and into the M14 in the late 50's- until the supply of walnut started to dry up and the furniture makers started bidding more for walnut than government arsenals could afford. During WWII only, they accepted figured walnut because they could not get enough straight grain walnut for 4 million Garands and all the stocks for the other small arms. After the war, figured walnut was rarely ever again seen as figure in wood often denotes less strength.
I am no expert on wood, but casual research seems to show walnut and hard maple grow at similar rates. So I'm not sure that had anything to do with it.
As to wood around the Arsenals at Springfield and Harper's Ferry, hard rock sugar maple grew in greater abundance around Springfield. If you look at the hills surrounding Harper's Ferry today, a whole lot of those trees are maple, though I admit I am not sure if they are sugar or other types of maple. Never really thought to take a good look at what kind of maple trees they are. Of course, they could have cut down all the walnut trees around the Arsenal years ago and maple was what they planted or what naturally "took over" the area. I don't know.
One reason they may not have used more maple was the sugar industry. White or Cane sugar was very expensive in the 18th century. Maple sugar was much more common and a whole lot less expensive. If they cut down all the sugar trees, they might have started another Revolution. Grin.
"By 1750 there were 120 (white) sugar refineries operating in Britain. Their combined output was only 30,000 tons per annum. At this stage sugar was still a luxury and vast profits were made to the extent that sugar was called "white gold". Governments recognised the vast profits to be made from sugar and taxed it highly. In Britain for instance, sugar tax in 1781 totalled £326,000, a figure that had grown by 1815 to £3,000,000. This situation was to stay until 1874 when the British government, under Prime Minister Gladstone, abolished the tax and brought sugar prices within the means of the ordinary citizen."
http://www.sucrose.com/lhist.htmlNow I could be WAY off base, but I always thought walnut was tougher than maple and could take military abuse better. My definition of "tougher" includes not being so likely to split and shatter - especially as DWS mentioned about bayonet fighting. Have to admit when I visited Springfield Armory NHS in 1984, they were in the process of cleaning the "Organ Pipes of Muskets" and I was really surprised how much sap wood was in approximately half the stocks of those M1863 muskets they had cleaned at that time. I chalked that up to the emergency of having to make so many M1863 muskets for the War Between the States and they only had so much seasoned walnut available.
As many of the folks here attest, hard maple carves better than black walnut and the figure is often better or maybe easier to find than figured walnut. That's why I always thought curly maple was more common in 18th and 19th century civilian arms.
Muzzleloading guns usually don't beat the stock in recoil as much as modern rifles. While you do see some curly or birdseye maple on modern gun stocks, it is no where nearly as common as walnut. When NM bolt gun shooters were still using wood stocks, curly maple or even standard maple stocks were very rare. Most all of them used walnut and since they had to have a very strong and stable stock, if maple was better than walnut, I'm sure they would have used it.
Maybe we can get Gary to comment here (and set me straight as need be) as he has a degree in Forestry, besides his vast experience with long rifles.
Gus Fisher