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Thanks for the link to the journals. I see the myth of the 1803 Harper's Ferry rifles even makes it into academic pieces.
https://lewisandclarkjournals.unl.edu/item/lc.jrn.1804-05-10#lc.jrn.1804-05-10.01
With respect, I've seen nothing that proves 1803 prototype rifles were not made at Harpers Ferry for the expedition. I'm not saying they were made, because there is no proof, but that does not mean they weren't made.
The two biggest arguments against it I've seen are as follows.
1. PRODUCTION of the M1803's was not set up until after Lewis left and none of those rifles were sent to the Expedition before they left. All this tells us is the production rifles weren't used.
2. Supposedly the idea of what an 1803 rifle wasn't even thought up until the letter from Secretary of War Dearborn wrote a letter to HF Master Armorer on 25 May 1803. The problem with this argument is Dearborn made some minor recommendations that tell me he had seen at least one, if not as many as three prototype M1803 rifles before he wrote the letter.
Gus