Artisan David Rase lives in Bremerton, Washington.
Bremerton is located on the Kitsap Peninsula, not far from the Puget Sound
Shipyard where Dave has worked for the Department of Defense for over 30
years. Back in 1976 a Navy Chief sparked Dave’s interest in gun building,
and before long he’d put together his first rifle from a kit. From that
point on, his interests and the scope of his projects began to grow, and continue
to grow to this day. Dave is now able to forge, sand cast and otherwise
fabricate many of his own gun parts. He creates a wide variety firearms and
also many of the accoutrements that would typically accompany them, and he
makes many of his own specialized tools , including the recent addition to his
shop of a rifling bench to hand rifle barrels. His work ranges from close
copies of original examples to very unique contemporary pieces.
We visited Dave in his shop shortly after the 2012
Washington Historical Gunmakers’ Guild event had ended. We were able to see
some of his works in progress and some finished pieces, and we talked about his
projects and his plans for the future.
Upon entering his shop, a very cleanly built, near
finished matchlock gun caught my eye …..
mid 17th century
English matchlock gun with handmade lock
…..Hey, very nice matchlock. Can you tell us about that
one?
That’s the first one I’ve made. I went to the Lewisburg
show two years ago - I was in John Getz’s shop helping him pack up and had seen
one on the wall and instantly fell in love with it. It was a 1650’s English
style matchlock built by Jurgen Kreckel from Pennsylvania. John took it to the
show and let me take it back to the motel room and disassemble it, photograph
it, measure and sketch everything.
Do you think part of the attraction may have been the
desire to figure out how to build the matchlock mechanism itself?
That was a big part of it. You’ll notice this one has a “tiller”
on it. It’s not a snap matchlock where you’d pull the trigger; that would in a
way make it too similar to a flintlock mechanism. That’s what attracted me
to the gun more than anything else, and then being able to go figure out all
the ratios and the spring tension, making all the parts - really the challenge
of building the whole mechanism, and also the challenge of building the
fishtail stock. I’d never done one before, so that again was something that
interested me.
handmade lock and tiller
Is that desire to learn something new often a factor
when you are choosing new projects to work on?
Yes. When I was originally getting started, I loved
building one of a kind projects and working through the challenges to pull it
off, but now it's more the challenge of correctly building the style of gun
that appeals to me.
Before I built my first iron mounted gun, I'd been
to the classes at Western Kentucky University. There was a
contemporary iron mounted gun there on display. Wallace Gusler made the
comment, "what a great gun...it's too bad he used cast steel
mounts..." With that concept planted in my brain there was no
way I was going to produce an iron mounted rifle with cast steel mounts. I
had to figure out how to forge my own mounts, and that was a challenge.
The next challenge along the way was learning how to sand cast may own brass
hardware. I don't do it that often any more, but if a client wants something
special I have that capability.
As a gun maker, what is appealing to you about building
a "composite" gun like your American Musket?
I think the appeal is in the artistic liberties you can
take in making a gun using parts that might have been found on a battlefield
and taken to a gunstocker. You have a lot of freedom - if you know your
schools, your time period and your location - and most importantly, the
architecture has to be there, and the pieces have to complement each
other.
An American Musket, stocked
with Brown Bess trigger guard and pipes and fitted with a hand made Dutch style
bayonet. Hand engraved lock, hardware and barrel.
The gun projects we're looking at here are quite
varied. Do you find as you get into these projects that you develop a different
mindset for each of them, or that you have a different approaches depending
on the type of work?
Here is my approach. I have a customer who likes an
original Jacob Dickert gun but doesn't like the sideplate, or doesn't like the
metal patchbox and wants a sliding wood box, or there's some other element
on the gun he'd like to change. I start imagining myself as Jacob
Dickert's apprentice. As a young apprentice, I was probably the one who was
asked to pick up various supplies and materials from nearby tradesmen to keep
our shop operating. During these trips I would have been exposed to the
different styles of guns in the region. As I found a feature that I really
liked on another gunmaker's gun, I would make a note of that. Once out on my
own, I was free to incorporate that feature into a gun of my own design. So
using this philosophy, when I build a gun, if you don't like the side
plate I can go look at other guns that were build in the Lancaster area and
pick something else out. As long as it was in that time frame and from
that region, I don't feel it detracts from the gun mixing and matching
from the same locale.
But what about a piece like your take down gun that
may be much more loosely based on original work?
The take down York gun may be more of a fantasy gun than
the others - you may not see that relief carving done in that particular
format wrapped around a bagged cheekpiece on originals, but all the elements of
the carving were taken off a couple of York guns I had looked at.
Some would define it as
"interpretive" work; in a sense you've taken what's traditional and
put your own spin on it. What is the approach to creating that kind of a
gun?
You've got to think things through, you're trying to
figure out what's plausible.
Years ago I took Wallace Gusler's engraving class at
Western Kentucky, I said " you taught us how to carve, you taught us
how to engrave, but you haven't taught us how to design..." Wallace replied,
"your mind is a catalog of everything you've looked at, and that's how you
design". You don't have to reinvent the wheel - the more you study guns,
the more elements you get that go into your head, and then when you sit down
and start sketching, you're recalling what you have studied.
York "take down gun" in progress. Relief carved York rifle of contemporary styling; brass hardware with silver embellishments.
In addition to making guns, Dave creates many fine accoutrements. We were able to photograph a few pieces that Dave had in the shop.
Oak flask which won the Madison Grant Award at Dixon's in 2006. Made of two hollowed oak slabs with antler stopper and hand made chain. Inspired by an original piece pictured in Madison Grant's "Powder Horns and Their Architecture" .
Banded powder horn with turned antler tip. Also a Madison Grant Award winner -2004
A pair of hand forged tomahawks - pipe tomahawk with osage handle patterned after the Alexander McKenzie hawk , and a second tomahawk in progress
Internal touch hole coning tool, similar to a tool used at the gun shop in Colonial Williamsburg.
Adjustable steel powder measure with unusual octagonal shank.
Aside from creating guns and related accoutrements, Dave operates a successful gun barrel inletting business, which he plans to expand to include a stock carving service.
Dave's work has appeared several times here on the Contemporary Makers Blog, and has been featured in Muzzleloader Magazine, the Contemporary Longrifle Association's American Tradition Magazine, and on American Pioneer Video's compilation DVD " Contemporary Kentucky Rifles Volume 2". Dave hopes to retire from his job with the government in 2013 and devote more time to his craft.
David Rase can be contacted at David Rase.
Thanks for such an interesting article here. I was searching for something like that for quite a long time and at last I have found it here.
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Some awesome work there. Have tried to contact David multiple times but perhaps he isnt taking orders
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