Thursday, August 14, 2014

2014 CLA Live Auction: Iron Mounted Elisha Bull Rifle by Roger Sells


Roger Sells is a well known contemporary builder and is a regular at the Lake Cumberland CLA Mini Show and at the KRA Show held at the Museum of Appalachia. He is noted for extremely well-made iron mounted Appalachian rifles and great Hawken rifles.

Roger lives in an area of Tennessee where gunsmiths lived and worked during the 1800 to early 1900 time frame. Roger notes that he was exposed to iron mounted Southern rifles at the age of 12, but he was not really interested in the history, design, and function of the rifles until he returned from military service in 1969. "My interest grew and I soon learned to love these iron mounted rifles because of their simple functional design and graceful lines. Rifles built by Ambrose Lawing, the Bean family, William Douglas, and Elisha Bull are close to my heart, but the rifles built by Elisha Bull of Bulls Gap Tennessee are my favorites."

When Roger decided to build a rifle for the CLA auction he chose an iron mounted Southern rifle with some of Elisha Bull's characteristics, considering the auction focus on the War of 1812 period. Elisha served as a private in a regiment of East Tennessee volunteers during the War of 1812. And Roger had been wanting to build a rifle like this for some time.

Roger did not build a bench copy of a specific Elisha Bull rifle, but he did incorporate characteristics from Elisha's double grease hole rifle and one of his tri-metal fancy rifles, combining those with characteristics Roger normally uses to build his own rifles. The results are this elegant, clean and very Elisha Bull like auction rifle. Roger said "My focus was to build a simple functional rifle with graceful lines like the rifles built by Elisha Bull." He certainly succeeded.

Roger used the following components:
Rice "A" weight 44 inch .40 cal. swamped barrel with square cut rifling.
Chamber's late Ketland flintlock
Davis #4 triggers
Walnut stock blank from Harrison's Gunstocks
The iron hardware and rear sight were fabricated in Roger's shop

This is truly a notable contemporary longrifle and exemplifies the period when the frontier was moving west, the economy was shifting to steamboats and cotton, and the classic iron mounted Southern rifles were reaching their artistic peak. It is difficult to achieve the true elegance of line, excellence of the iron mounts, and balanced architecture that carries a simple un-ornamented tool into a classic artwork. Roger Sell's Elisha Bull inspired rifle does 






You can contact Roger via email at: 

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