gstubbs
32 Cal
The stocks of two firearms have been cut down to make shoulder stocks for two examples of the obsolete tool the "farrier's butteris". This chisel-like tool was used for paring down a horse's hoof prior to shoeing. The farrier held the tool at the grip with one hand, and applied pressure from the shoulder. The stocks were normally made of wood, shaped to fit comfortably against the shoulder. The use of the butteris was eventually discouraged because of the risk of injury to the horse.
Can anyone help identify the kind of guns from which they were salvaged? I make no pretense of knowing anything about early firearms. I originally speculated they were from the Civil War era, but photos of "Brown Bess" muskets, and advertisements for replacements parts have me wondering whether the longer, plainer looking, one was from the Revolutionary War period. The butt plate photos that I've seen on line mostly don't include the engraved decoration shown on the other example. Neither stock has a screw through the top side, and each has a horizontal iron pin located where it would run though a projection under the top part of the butt plate. I'm working on a piece for the "Chronicle", the journal of the Early American Industries Association EAIA.
Can anyone help identify the kind of guns from which they were salvaged? I make no pretense of knowing anything about early firearms. I originally speculated they were from the Civil War era, but photos of "Brown Bess" muskets, and advertisements for replacements parts have me wondering whether the longer, plainer looking, one was from the Revolutionary War period. The butt plate photos that I've seen on line mostly don't include the engraved decoration shown on the other example. Neither stock has a screw through the top side, and each has a horizontal iron pin located where it would run though a projection under the top part of the butt plate. I'm working on a piece for the "Chronicle", the journal of the Early American Industries Association EAIA.