Hi Dave, thanks for the feedback, I do love Wogdon guns and they are beauty`s. This is a little of topic but being muzzle loaders you guys may like these, my Grandad made them, he spent his entire life in the gun trade having been born in 1912, these are probably the last damascus barrels made in the UK using the traditional ways, started in the sixties and almost completed in the eighties before he passed.
Those little shotguns are outstanding! The Damascus barrels are extraordinary!
Thank you for showing them.
I wonder what the loosers wife does with his pistols, as he doesn't need them anymore. ? it is a question that I have pondered about?
Toot's post may have been all in fun, but it's worth a comment.
I don't know about Britain, but in the United States, women had very few rights until well into the twentieth century. When a man died, it was customary for an appraiser to come in and evaluate his property. If he owed any debts, such as a mortgage on the farm or estate, an auction was held and the proceeds were used to pay off what he owed. If there was any left, the widow might receive it. If there was none, the widow was left utterly destitute. Life insurance was nonexistent.
This happened to one set of my great-great-grandparents. The man, a respected member of the community, a tradesman and farmer, husband and father, was murdered. This was in Alabama, in approximately 1858. The perpetrators were caught by an enraged community and lynched on the spot. However, debts were owed, his property was appraised and auctioned off, and my great-great-grandmother was left with
nothing except her two daughters. I think she ended up sharecropping and doing washing for people, until she was able to remarry, which I believe was probably done out of necessity rather than romantic love.
People who were wealthy enough to own dueling pistols may have had enough resources to provide a "safety net" of sorts for widows. I don't know. If they didn't, chances are pretty good the loser's property, including his pistols, if he owned them, would have been sold at auction. The widow would very likely have been happy to be shed of them.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob