Wednesday, July 31, 2013

New Rifle by Mark Wheland

This rifle was inspired by the work of John Rupp. 
Buttplate and trigger guard are my own patterns. 
Barrel is a Getz 45 1/2" - 50 caliber.
Lock is a large Siler that I reshaped.
Lockplate measures 4 7/8 x 15/16"
Finish is red varnish over a light wash of ferric nitrate.







Copy and photos supplied by Mark Wheland.

Antique Pipe Tomahawk

Pipe tomahawk 
OAL 16 1/4   inch
head 6 5/16
bit 2 1/16


The pipe tomahawk came out of England at the end of World War II where it was sharpened. The haft shows much use and patination with traces of red paint near the head.

Copy and photos supplied by friend of Contemporary Makers Blog.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

2013 CLA Live Auction: A Hunter’s Shot Pouch Set from a Frontier on the Eve of War by Calvin Tanner and Jim Hayes


Cal Tanner is a maker of hunting pouches, haversacks, powderhorns and other items who is well known for his exceptional leather craftsmanship and quality.  He has won numerous awards for his work, which, in Cal’s own words, he approaches with the mindset of a professionally-trained eastern craftsman working with locally available materials after moving to the Ohio frontier at the end of the 18th century.  Jim Hays and his wife Peggy are multi-talented artists with unique ability to capture the feel of well-made, authentic looking and aged accoutrements - including forge work, knives, pouches, horns and textiles.  Cal and Jim are neighbors working in the beautiful and historic Paint Creek Valley region of southern Ohio.  They have teamed up for this year’s auction to replicate a rare surviving early 19th century pouch with a history that is intertwined with the events leading up to the warfare that erupted on the Indiana frontier in 1811. 

The “Thomas Simpson Pouch” and its accompanying horn, was carried and used by Simpson – a professional hunter working the present-day Ohio-Indiana border area in the first decade of the 19th century. Born in Maryland in 1773 Simpson moved with the frontier – to North Carolina, the Clinch River area of Tennessee, and by the early 1800s on to the western edge of the settlements along the 1795 Greenville Treaty Line.  In the winter of 1809-1810 he moved west beyond the old Treaty line when he hired out as a hunter for the survey crew that ran the western boundary of the famous “12-Mile Purchase.”  The 12-Mile Purchase had been negotiated with pro-American chiefs at the Treaty of Fort Wayne in 1809, against the wishes of Tecumseh and other opposed Native leaders – and thus was one of the first in a string of treaties and sales that led to the hostility that erupted on the Indian frontier in 1811.  Simpson remained  - first settling in the surveyors’ cabin – located in present day Fayette County, Indiana, and spent the rest of his life in the area, eventually being joined by his family and many friends from North Carolina. 

The original pouch set is a fitting project for Cal’s and Jim’s artistry – beyond the regional connection it exhibits a combination of professional and home-spun craft – extremely well made and simple yet beautifully designed with a long pointed tail flap and an inner divider.  True to the original, Cal has reproduced the pouch in oak-tanned calfskin while having the original on his bench to study.  Cal also demonstrates his talent as a horner, faithfully reproducing the original horn accompanying the bag with its single raised ring and a reinforcing iron band on the spout and a domed plug held by hand-cut wooden pegs.  The worn out and replaced strap, the glassy translucence and flattening on the horn’s inboard side and the presence of a powder measure made from a late 19th century center-fire shell casing -  discovered hidden deep in the bottom of the pouch – all suggest countless miles of carry and generations of use. 

Jim has added a beautiful bone handled knife with a hand-forged blade to complete the set.  The knife is perfectly in keeping with the strong but simple and elegant features of the bag and horn.














“I have been a lover of history and believe in the preservation of our heritage. I’ve liked muzzleloading for many years and made my first trip to Friendship (the national matches at the home range of the National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association) in 1965.

I served in the military in Germany.

I am a hobby blacksmith and am self-taught – I usually blacksmith and whitesmith my work.  I am into knives, colonial hardware and anything else that may strike my “fancy”.  I consider myself a professional piddler.

I also like reenacting and going to rendezvous and love to collect early antiques, primitives, guns and accoutrements.”
Jim Hays

To see more of Cal’s and Jim’s work, you can visit these links:
Contact:
Calvin Tanner:
218 Hwy 50
Bainbridge, OH 45612
(740) 634-3579
email: tannermc@bright.net

Jim and Peggy Hays:
1832 California Hollow Road
Bainbridge, OH 45612
(740) 626-2381
Email: peaceablekingdomfarm@horizonview.net      

Copy by Cal Tanner and Jim Hayes. Photos supplied by the Contemporary Longrifle Foundation.

Powder Horn from The Chiefswood Collection

Powder horn
Iroquois
Hand carved; cow horn, hide, brass, wood
Length 26.5 x width 8 x height 9 cm
18th century
Area of Origin: Six Nations of the Grand River, Ontario, Canada
Area of Use: 2.6.3 John Smoke Johnson
Owned by George H.M. Johnson, Mohawk from Six Nations of the Grand River
Daphne Cockwell Gallery of Canada: First Peoples
Gift of Miss Evelyn H.C. Johnson; The Chiefswood Collection

Some of the earliest objects in the collection – a ball-headed club, a powder horn and a collection of silver brooches – belonged to her great grandparents, and date to the period of the American Revolution (1776 – 1783) and the War of 1812. In the early 20th century Evelyn H.C. Johnson, a member of a prominent Six Nations Mohawk family, donated to the Royal Ontario Museum a large number of objects named the Chiefswood Collection after the name of the Johnson family home. In this collection, Evelyn Johnson created a remarkable record of her family over four generations, and of events that involved the Iroquoian people at Six Nations from the end of the American Revolution to the Six Nations Agricultural Fair of 1922.

Copy and images from Royal Ontario Museum.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Jaeger Rifles at Castle of Karlsruhe: Part III







Copy and photos supplied by Contemporary Makers' European Correspondent, Manfred Schmitz.

Ball-Headed Mohawk Club

Ball-headed club
Mohawk
Hand carved wood
Length 38 x width 11 cm
mid-19th century
Area of Origin: Six Nations of the Grand River, Brantford, Ontario, Canada
Owned by George H.M. Johnson, Mohawk from Six Nations of the Grand River

Description: Some of the earliest objects in the collection – a ball-headed club, a powder horn and a collection of silver brooches – belonged to her great grandparents, and date to the period of the American Revolution (1776 – 1783) and the War of 1812. In the early 20th century Evelyn H.C. Johnson, a member of a prominent Six Nations Mohawk family, donated to the Royal Ontario Museum a large number of objects named the Chiefswood Collection after the name of the Johnson family home. In this collection, Evelyn Johnson created a remarkable record of her family over four generations, and of events that involved the Iroquoian people at Six Nations from the end of the American Revolution to the Six Nations Agricultural Fair of 1922.

Copy and images from Royal Ontario Museum.

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Jaeger Rifles at Castle of Karlsruhe: Part II


















Copy and photos supplied by Contemporary Makers' European Correspondent, Manfred Schmitz.