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Brown Bess ID help please

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Eaton54

32 Cal
Joined
Mar 29, 2023
Messages
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Location
Conroe , Tx
Family heirloom Musket with Provenance to French Indian War Veteran as owner . have verified he was with Wolfe at Quebec battle In September of 1759 , trying to confirm this musket is old enough to have been there too … overall length 55 1/2 inches long , barrel 39 inches , sadly badly pitted …
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Hi,
I am sorry Eaton, the gun is not even close to the F&I war and was likely made of parts salvaged from a late India pattern Brown Bess and a model 1777 or later French musket. The barrel looks to have Birmingham proof marks indicating manufacture after 1813. I believe it likely is an American militia musket cobbled together during the first quarter of the 19th century.

dave
 
Thank you Dave … i could verify the ancestors presence at the 1759 battle but was unsure of the musket . I thought it was probably India but wasn’t sure , what about it indicates it has French components ?
 
So two questions , why would the French trigger guard and side plate be added to a late India pattern ? As an upgrade or to replace damage ? Lastly , I just inherited this relic . As the pictures show it is in poor condition. What if anything can be done to clean it up and restore it , or should it just be left as is ?
 
So two questions , why would the French trigger guard and side plate be added to a late India pattern ? As an upgrade or to replace damage ? Lastly , I just inherited this relic . As the pictures show it is in poor condition. What if anything can be done to clean it up and restore it , or should it just be left as is ?
 
So two questions , why would the French trigger guard and side plate be added to a late India pattern ? As an upgrade or to replace damage ?

Most likely to repair damage or missing part(s). A large amount of these were dumped by the British as they exited out of the flintlock era and into the caplock type ignition. Folks trading with "natives" sold them, and a large number were also sold to the Mexican government. There were also third models aka "India Pattern" that were captured at the Battle of New Orleans.

What if anything can be done to clean it up and restore it , or should it just be left as is ?

You will want somebody to take a hard look at it in person. The quality of how well the replacement parts were fit, may mean that this was done at an armory, or by a rather skilled gunsmith, and it might have been part of a state's arsenal at one point. It might have seen action in the Texas War of Independence, or the Mexican American war. Leave it as is, and just have it stabilized, so corrosion would damage it further.

LD
 
This gun is from New Hampshire . The previous posts suggest it was assembled after 1813 , and possibly used by local militia .
The idea that parts were added To an India pattern isn't quite right Eaton.
This wasn't an India pattern. It was as Dave says made up With India pattern And French parts.
Best,
Richard.
I’m a little confused . if it’s isn’t India pattern , what did it start out as before India pattern and French parts were added ?
 
Hi,
Let me clarify as PK wrote, I believe it is a possible American militia musket made with a new stock and mounted with old British and French military parts. British ordnance adopted the EIC pattern musket as a cost saving measure during the last decade of the 18th century. However, there do not seem to be any ordnance proof marks on the barrel nor any on the lock although there is the Tower stamp and the crown over GR. But there is no apparent small crown and arrow mark under the pan indicating government ownership. So the source of the British parts is a puzzle. Maybe they are from a privately purchased or commercial musket bought by the various British or Canadian volunteer militias. It might also be possible they are from Birmingham muskets that were purchased by the US for our Marine Corps at the end of the 18th century. French musket parts or similar surplus American musket parts would have been available and perhaps some American militiaman had a local gunsmith make a musket from older parts so he could meet his militia obligations. Many states had mandatory militia enrollment for men between certain ages and they usually had to supply their own muskets unless they could not afford to. Then the state might issue them government owned arms . That system was wide spread and in full force during the War of 1812 and quite a few years after.

dave
 
Thanks to everyone who has weighed in on my questions …so if this gun is a composite of many different parts , and doesn’t fit the traditional classes of identification …can it still be called a brown Bess ?
 
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