So the "Bess Trade Musket" is a bit confusing out there....,
Pedersoli makes
Brown Bess Carbines. They look like this:
View attachment 80729
Now Dixie Gun Works sells what they call a
Brown Bess Trade Gun, and they look like this, and have a "serpent" sideplate instead of the British SLP Bess sideplate, the lock is heavily case hardened and the barrel is blued, according to the website:
View attachment 80731
Dixie Gun Works also sells a
Brown Bess Trade Gun Kit, which I would think would be a kit version of the second musket above, but when you look at the photo, you see a standard British SLP sideplate AND a serpent. It looks like this:
View attachment 80733
Now the sideplates are usually pre-inlet in the kits, so I don't know if the fellow shooting the photo for DGW's website put the British side plate in there by accident, and the kit only comes with the serpent side plate OR since this is a special offer from DGW and not in the current Pedersoli offerings, perhaps DGW ordered the stock not inlet for the side plate, and you the builder get to choose? I would expect the former, that the photo is wrong, and you don't get two sideplates, and you use the serpent sideplate which merely rests against the stock, held in place by the two lock screws.
So as far as history goes..., The standard Pedersoli Bess isn't really correct for the AWI, and is "right out" for the F&I. The shorter carbine version (above) is a bit farther off the historic trail, but is used by reenactors as an artillery or sergeant's carbine, or as an officer's fusil.
The Brown Bess Trade Gun is taking the carbine, bluing the barrel and casehardening the lock, and slapping a serpent sideplate upon it... and calling it a "trade gun"... well that's
fantasy land (imho and from what I've read).
A serpent sideplate is more usually found on an actual trade gun. Pedersoli's
Indian Trade Musket , is a mediocre copy of a trade gun, but it's closer to a proper trade gun than the above "Brown Bess trade gun". It's 20 gauge with a 6" longer barrel than the above muskets, full stocked, browned barrel, a different lock, and the rammer is wooded. The Indian Trade Mukset looks like this:
View attachment 80735
Now don't get me wrong, ALL of the above guns are known to be good smoothbores. I own a full sized Pedersoli Bess and a Indian Trade Musket. I know several people who shoot and love their Bess Carbines.
IF it was me, I'd contact DGW and ask about the sideplate, and IF it came with the British sideplate, THAT is what I'd build into my kit not the serpent plate..., IF I wanted a musket styled flintlock for shooting and hunting.
IF on the other hand, I wanted a flintlock smoothbore, mostly for hunting and shooting, (and carrying around in the woods all day), and the military look wasn't that big a need, I'd get the
Indian Trade Musket in a kit, and use that.
LD