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Hacksaw development and sawed off smothbore development are probably parallel technologies!
Oh , I just to be able to say " Ive been there ..." .I love that about all historical places , just want to be there . Love my history . Ive been to historical places and there is absolutely nothing there ...at all , but glad I went . If anyone wants anything NW gun related they just have to holler at me . I love building them . I'm on my last Fusil de chasse now , no more ...just gonna build NW guns and Carolina Guns ....I know you can sell them like hot cakes at most Midwest gun shows and Rendezvous...
Rob the fort at Mackinac is interesting. But theirs only a few guns to see. Mostly Brown Bess Muskets.
Why thank ya bud , I try .....Good info there too .@Rob M. builds some cool guns!
There's plenty of historical precedent for short guns, but the names we apply to them are more recent. Below is a screenshot of a post by Matt Denison on this very forum from eleven years ago. Matt is a former proprietor of North Star West. Here, Matt explains the origin of the term, "Canoe Gun":
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Samuel Hearne described native people cutting down the barrels of guns that had burst. Isaac Cowie also mentioned the practice in his book, In the Company of Adventurers:
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There are lots of pictures of shortened original guns on the web. This one from Ambrose Antiques is pretty well known:
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This next one was reportedly one of Frederic Remington's studio props. It is now in the Buffalo Bill Historical Center:
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That conveniently located yardstick in the photo shows us the barrel is about 25" long. I'm scratching my head over this one, though... The spacing of the ramrod pipes makes it look as if it was made short like that. I'm not aware of people going to the trouble of moving and refitting ramrod pipes in cut-down guns back in the day.
Quote from post #6 in this thread:
I don't know when hacksaws were invented. I don't recall ever seeing one listed in a trader's inventory. However, Indians didn't need them. The traders did have all sorts of files for sale, and a three-cornered file was used for this purpose by filing a circumferential groove around the barrel. They would keep filing, going deeper and deeper, until it cut through. This leaves a bevel on the barrel at the muzzle, which is a tell-tale sign of the barrel being filed off and is typical of Indian guns. The cut-off piece of barrel could be re-worked into any number of useful objects... Hide fleshers, whistles, smoking pipes...
Best regards,
Notchy Bob
I have a stock for one, but need a barrel. Smooth bores seem to be scarce right now and I don't want to waste a perfectly good barrel by cutting it off.I keep thinking I should have a blanket gun to play with. Any one on the fourm own or played around with a one?
Mkui Medal
Guerre Abenakis
P.S. I would also like to see any pictures of blanket guns people may have
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