I've notice a good deal of brass embellishments on many of the flintlock rifles I've seen. Is there a good source of defininitions about the meanings behind many of them? Hunter's Stars, Hearts, etc...and many others that I do not recognize....
Zonie said:I find it interesting, seeing as how religion was very important to most of the people in the 1700's and Christianity in North America was the most common form that an obvious and very direct symbol, that being the simple christian cross never seems to appear on the Longrifles that were made then.
I've asked before on this forum if anyone knows why and I have yet to see anyone answer.
You guys want to try again?
Zonie said:Chuck Dixon, in "The Art of Building the Pennsylvania Longrifle" lists several of the more common shapes . . .
Distelfink: "thistle finch": Small bird thought to bring good luck to the owner.
I'll be interested in the answer too if there's actually specific meanings...I always just assumed they were little add on items like people used to add fox tails and mud flaps on cars decades ago...
And need A LOT MORE OF today!Benjamin Rush thought much more highly of the PA Germans than did Franklin, who said that the Germans (other than the Saxons) were "swarthy" and not pure whites.... :shake: Jefferson wished the whole country could be populated with Germans, as he saw them as pious, sober, industrious, and self-reliant. Everything the new Republic needed.
I've notice a good deal of brass embellishments on many of the flintlock rifles I've seen. Is there a good source of defininitions about the meanings behind many of them? Hunter's Stars, Hearts, etc...and many others that I do not recognize....
I've notice a good deal of brass embellishments on many of the flintlock rifles I've seen. Is there a good source of defininitions about the meanings behind many of them? Hunter's Stars, Hearts, etc...and many others that I do not recognize....
Enter your email address to join: