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Family Gun

4K views 23 replies 8 participants last post by  WHSmithIV 
#1 ·
This gun was handed down in my family from about 1800. I belive it belonged to my 2nd Great Grandfather, Harvey Duncan Whitlock. He was born in Union SC, 1819. The gun is overall 52" long, the single barell is 35" long, with a octogon 3/4" bore and octogon 1 1/4" outside. On the rt side, the plate has a scine of a hunter with a long gun in a pons with Catails and ducks flying and falling into the water. It has a short stock wit a Puter ? cap. It has a 2 peice Brass side plate with a hinged Patch Box. The Butt plate is Brass. The Trigger Guard and Triggers are Iron. It is Percussion. I have been tols it may have been originaly a Flint Lock. I was always told the gun was older than the one "Davy Crockett" used, "Old Betsy". Any information to Identify and date it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Charles Garner
Fort Worth, TX
 

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#3 · (Edited)
Original percussion from the 1850's-1870's would be my guess. It's kind of odd but not really rare to see a half stock with a pinned barrel. The patch box and butt plate could have come from Davy's era. They didn't come on that rifle.

It bears a strong resemblance to a Tryon trade rifle from the mid 1870's.

 
#4 ·
I would call it a 'right as rain' variant Plains Rifle, ca. 1850, original percussion. The patch box is something of a carry-over from an earlier time but original to the gun. Bore of 3/4 makes me wonder if it wasn't bored out from a smaller caliber, now maybe ? smooth bore as a shotgun.
 
#6 ·
As I said - "variant". I'm skeptical of 'usual' becoming 'gotta be' - having seen many variations in a lot of different kinds of guns. This rifle resembles many half-stock mid century rifles, including my Leman with 1 1/4" barrel but .54 bore. Opinion is just opinion, yours or mine, based on where we formed it.
 
#7 ·
I would like to see some better pictures of the lock plate and the side opposite.

I tend to agree that the patchbox and its plates and the buttplate are of an earlier era and (IMHO) were taken from an older gun. The patchbox has been repaired at some point as shown by the latch and spring rivets showing indications of replacement. Plus the patchbox plate is cracked where the replacement rivet was hammered flat, and the screw heads are not of the type usual to that age of rifle. If I were asked, without any knowledge of the history of that rifle, I would guess that the lockplate and buttplate are relatively recent additions, probably in the last 50 years, and were not put on by an expert in the older rifles.

Jim
 
#8 · (Edited)
I may have an advance case of 'retro thinking' but this looks to me like a gun someone had made by some average unknown gun builder of about 1850. The person ordering the gun liked the patchbox-butt configuration of earlier times. No problem to me the evidence of repair to the patch box, and its inletting is about as good as it gets. I could buy the idea that the patch box may have seen pre-use before this gun.

Retro-thinking dates back in time. I once had in my shop a fine wheellock rifle made a century after the flint became the standard. It was dated and the maker was of a family of makers well recorded which I checked out.

Retroism is alive and well today. There are people who like Single Action Colts and 1911 automatics.

For info about installing a patchbox, look for a copy of my Modern Kentucky Rifle on eBay. There are about 50K of them out there I had printed from 1960 to ca 1990 when I sold my pubs to DGW. Still in print I think.
 
#9 ·
The Gun was handed down from my Great-Greatgrandfather B:1819,Greatgrandfather B:1844, to my Grandmother B:1899 to my Uncle B:1924 to me. As far as I know it was not changed from original in this time frame.
PS: Thanks for the input so far, it does help.
Charlie
 

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#12 ·
Sorry for the mistake. My Grandmother's husband, my Grandfather was born 1889, in Arkansas. Perhaps it originated with him?
The story may have but IMHO the gun is a little older than that. It's a nice old gun and has family history. That's more than a lot of folks have. Does it have rifling still or was it bored out? A 3/4 bore would be around 75 caliber. While that's not impossible it would be a little unusual.
 
#15 ·
OK from your pic it is rifled. I would be hesitant to put a value on it especially without knowing who made it. Are there any markings other than the ones you listed earlier? There may be proofs on the bottom of the barrel but I would be hesitant to remove it because of the risk of splintering the wood around the pin.
 
#16 ·
Well Hawg,
After carefuly dissasembly, I found absolutly no markings. Bummer! However, everything still works. My Great Grandfather was born 1844, and my Great Great Grandfather was born 1819. Mabe that will help date it. Bothe were from SC.
Thanks for your help,
Charlie
 
#17 ·
No it doesn't. It's always been a percussion rifle and they weren't common until the 1830's. The early ones had drum breeches where yours has a snail. IMHO the oldest it could possibly be is 1840 and the newest considering the large rifled bore would be 1850ish. I don't think it would be any newer than the mid 1850's. Maybe somebody more learned than I can shed some more light on it.
 
#18 ·
One needs to remember that often gunsmiths would repurpose gun parts--barrels and hardware would be reused, often resulting in a mix of parts from different eras. The only absolute is that there ARE no absolutes when it comes to these guns. The pinned barrel is not that unusual--I have two early half-stock rifles with pinned barrels. I don't think the bore is 3/4"--appears to be closer to 60 caliber than 75--could you check it again? Measure from land to land (raised part of rifling, not groove depth to groove depth.

I could easily have been your great great grandfathers (born 1819). If he acquired it in 1850, he would only have been 31 or so. If you don't plan on selling it, I'd put an insurance value of about $2,000 on it.
 
#19 ·
Thanks Buffalochip,
When I measured the inside of the barrel, it was from the grove to the other side which is flat. The "Duck Hunting Sceine" ingraved on the side plate is why I guessed it was a hunting gun. I will be doing more investigating into my family history and a lot of pictures to go through. Mabe I will learn more then. I am not planing on selling it.
Thanks again,
Charles Garner
 
#24 ·
Charlie, you are very lucky. I wish that in my family history such a pice would have been handed down to me. Sadly, even though my grandmother traced back to the Mayflower, nobody in my family were shooters. They were 'city folk'. No guns to pass down. If my Granddad had one (and he probably did own a pistol), I never saw it and am sure my grandmother would have 'gotten rid of it' after he passed away.

For insurance value, I'd say that $500 is reasonable. The reality is that to you and your family it is priceless. If your home burned down and the rifle with it no amount of money could bring it back. That is a nice old rifle and it is in decent condition. At a gun auction it could conceivably get that price if there were bidders who really wanted it. If you'd ever like to sell it, let me know. I'd try to dig up as much as $200 for the rifle and that would not be easy for me to do. I certainly would love it in my collection though. If you ever take it to a pawn shop they are likely only going to offer you 25-50 bucks for it.

If such a rifle had ever been handed down to me, I would restore it and make it go bang again :)
 
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