The lock
is a Queen Anne by L & R –
The stock
was handmade from the blank (not pre-carved) and is a piece of plain,
Pennsylvania red maple that has been air-dried for 12 years -
The
"all-round" tapered 20 ga. barrel is 41-15/16" long with a
1" breech, 20 ga. Barrel is breeched 1/2" deep with a straight tang
breech plug -
All
mounts and the single trigger were forged by don. The iron buttplate is
"nailed" on.
The
hickory ramrod is tapered and also handmade.
The
handmade front sight is an iron "barley corn" and is dovetailed into
the barrel.
"This
gun was made to look like a gun started by a Southern blacksmith who had
gunsmithing experience, and possibly finished by an Indian or someone else on
the early Southern frontier during the period 1755 - 1780."
This gun
was tastefully aged and was purposely given the look of a gun on the early
American frontier. There is evidence of hard use, and also damage with an upper
forearm repair and a deer rawhide wrist wrap. The 2 upper ramrod pipes were
pinned but the lugs and pins were never put on; hence, the rawhide wraps to
secure the barrel to the stock. This is in keeping with the story above. The 3
rawhide wraps on the stock were put on while wet, allowed to dry, and then
treated with a special glue and beeswax. Carving includes a large, but subtle,
incised "sun" centered on the toe line of the buttstock, with
"sun rays" extending upward on each side of the stock; plus, a plain
beavertail around the breechplug tang. This is a very durable and strongly and
tightly built gun. The trigger and lock work smoothly and safely together and
the trigger pull is very light. The vent
is 1/16" and is "coned" from the outside. The stock has
1/8" cast-off, the butt is 2-1/8" wide X 5" tall, the drop is
2-5/8" and the trigger pull is 13-7/8". The gun weighs 7 lbs. 4 oz.
Total OAL is 57-3/4".
Copy and photos supplied by Allen Reed for Don Burton.
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