No truth at all, usually a story told by a seller at a gun show trying to palm off a well worn Bannerman conversion of a percussion Civil War rifle-musket. Springfield Armory did make forager's guns in the cartridge era. They were smoothbored trapdoors but never a percussion gun.
Most likely a combination of wishful thinking and a story, family provenance is often wrong.
I agree, also tons of 1816 percussion conversions, smoothbore Potsdam muskets, Rench and Belgian smoothbores, thousands of smoothbores that were taken out of service to be replaced with the newer rifle muskets, there would be no reason to make new ones for such limited use.I've never heard of any legitimate 1861-1865 Springfields made new as smoothbores. And why would they ? There were plenty of Model 1842 muskets still in inventory that were already smoothbore and could easily be issued as needed for providing food.
If this is true. Why were the Federals taking and killing livestock from farmers in the South. No I believe some of the Southern men did not have regular mealsIn my humble, the barrel band alone eliminates any chance of a military conversion. And I've seen just a few Bannerman examples over the years; they were actually done fairly well where workmanship is concerned. So it could be anything. I must say that, based on other other on-line firearms auction sites and the number of so-called "forager" smoothbore conversions said to be done by the military back in the day, it's a wonder that it was necessary for soldiers during the Civil War to ever need any kind of meat ration at all; each company would had to have upwards of a dozen of these "foragers" in their posession for hunting use if the claims are true.
I agree I was told by a 70 year old gun collector that it could have started off as a shotgun because there is no cutout for rear sightIt's a Bannermanized 1863 Springfield rifle-musket that has seen a (typical) hard life. That rework was done after the War by one of many outfits turning these out for civilian use. These were sold by hardware stores and mail order (Sears, Montgomery Wards and others) up into the early 20th. century for a price of $3 or even less. They were disposable, ridden hard and put away wet. In most cases they are worth the collective value of their useable parts and no more.
I agree I was told by a 70 year old gun collector that it could have started off as a shotgun because there is no cutout for rear sight
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