Hi,
"They got used up, scrapped and thrown away. The ones that survived til today are the fancy ones with all the carving and inlays that hardly ever got shot."
Then how come so many "fancy" original long rifles were converted to percussion? If they were not used, why make the change. Many of those "fancy" guns you are thinking of were reconverted back to flint in the 20th century but were used as both flint and percussion rifles during their working lives. Why do most "fancy" long rifles from colonial and golden age periods that are still in original flint condition show much wear around the locks and vent holes? Certainly there are some that do not but most that I examined at shows, museums, and in collections show considerable wear from shooting. The Moravian records published by Bob Lienemann and his co-authors document a lot of the work done at the famous Christian's Spring gun shop. Their version of a simple plain gun usually had a butt plate, side plate, carving around the barrel tang, a little carving on the wooden patch box and behind the cheek piece, and perhaps a "Moravian Star" inletted on the cheek piece. The price for that quality gun was about a dozen dressed buck skins, something well within the means of a frontier settler or hunter. Look at Davy Crockett's purported first rifle, a nice York County piece with carving and engraving. Look at the rifles made by the English firms of Grice and Wilson for their indian trade in the late 18th century that was supposed to copy the fashion and style demanded by their customers on the frontiers. They are finely made with carving and both wood and brass patchboxes. The fanciest of the 3 grades offered was the most popular version and in demand. It cost 2lbs 12 shillings, which is about the cost of a fairly fancy rifle from Christian's Spring. The notion that all or even most of those surviving long rifles from colonial and golden age periods were fancy ones that were hardly used and that the rifles actually used were mostly plain "schimmels" and "poor boys" does not hold up under scrutiny. Moreover, during the mid-late 18th century, there is not much evidence that farmers made their own simple guns during winter. Gun making was a trade with an apprentice system and many gun makers aspired to the American dream of that time, which was to make enough money to buy land, take up farming, and quit their trade work.
dave