Yelodwg said:
A friend and I are trying to find out any information about his percussion black powder pistol. The double barrels are over/under. Looks like they might be .58.
BP Pistol photos
Tom
Tom, it is my opinion, based on having actually shot many howdah pistols over the years, that this pistol is not of English make.
It has to be remembered that those folks who shot these handguns were not at the bottom of the food chain, nor mostly anywhere near the middle part. They were officers of the EIC, or of the British Indian Army, or native aristocracy, and money meant little or nothing to them in that respect.
I hope you will not be offended by my comment that this pistol is very crude by comparison with any English/Irish-made howdah pistol, especially in the barrels and around the action. A look at any of the products of contemporary howdah pistol makers would reveal machining and fitting of the highest quality, as befits a gun that would have cost as much as a small four-wheel carriage at that time. Figure on a Rigby of Dublin howdah pistol, cased with all it accessories, costing the same now as it did then at around the equivalent of $4500 or so. The Lancaster oval bore FOUR-barrelled pistol cost an astonishing 500 guineas - that's around a present day cost of $6500. Remember the prime reason for the very existence of this kind of pistol was a literal last-ditch defence against a wounded, or 'missed' tiger that could, and often did, take your head off with a swipe of a paw. They HAD to work every time - the reputation of the gun-maker depended on it.
Also, there would have been very little - if any - ornamentation on it - in fact, I've never seen one that was scrolled like yours/his is.
So, although it's not British, it might be Belgian-made - after all, the Belgians made firearms for everybody, but as Zonie notes, it really needs the proof marks to be seen.
EVERY English-made/Irish-made and Belgian-made firearm has proof marks of some kind denoting successful passing of gun Proof. England has the London and Birmingham Proof houses, Ireland that time had the Dublin Proof house, and Belgium has the Liége Proof House.
tac