I'm going to have to look that up myself Vic. The Flayderman's I've got is the 8th Edition and the printing history says 2001.
The exact statement goes thus:
"Current judgment by Remington scholars is that Eliphalet II, the first Remington name associated with the arms trade, made barrels only for approximately the first 30 years, never turning out a complete gun during that period.
The issue would appear put to rest by the well documented article of H.J. Swinney ( Gun Report,April, 1987). Nowhere among the many early references quoted is there the slightest mention of gun-making by Remington in those early years. There are, however, among those references to official government documents and various published works numerous citations indicating their barrel making activities..."
"Tradition has it, that while working at his farther's forge near Ilion, New York (German Flats) Eliphalet produced his first entire rifle, somewhere between the years 1816 and 1828. Fact seems to indicate that he turned out barrels only, and not too many at that. The forge was producing farm tools and implements to meet local needs, the additon of gun barrels apparently was the logical expansion of their output to a fertile aea, that of supplying the many gunsmiths working in the central New York area. There certainly was no mass production of such barrels, much less guns. Of the handful of flintlocks that have surfaced attributed to Remington, none have been judged a "true" example of his work, other than possibly the barrel; and that, too, is questionable. It continues to be a matter for contention if such early (1816-1828) barrels were even marked, or how, and in what form those markings were applied." Flayderman's Guide To Antique American Arms 8th Edition, p. 149
Anyhow, that's where I got the information.
Voyageur