Blacky Montana
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2007
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 0
Hey Guys,
It appears I had some pretty good luck this week. A lady that works with my wife, was aware that I enjoy BP hunting through conversations with she has had with her. The lady was doing some cleaning out of her spare or storage bedroom, and came upon a set of CVA muzzleloaders that had belonged to her husband who passed away a few years ago. They were originally kits that had been given to him as a gift. One is a rifle with the two piece full stock (little brass spacer in betwwen the two stocks), and a matching pistol simular to like a Kentucky or Frontier pistol. Both in .45 cal. He had put them together, and then just used them for decorations in his office. Neither have ever been fired. The best time line I can put on them is between 10 and 20 years ago. She said that after he recieved them as gifts, they had sat in the closet for a few years before he ever put them together. She added that it was maybe 10 to 15 years ago when he finally assembeled them. The stamp on both barrels reads... Connecticut Valley Arms Inc.. under that.. Black Powder Only .45 cal.. So how old these are I realy dont know for sure. Both are percussion. As I said before, the rifle has the two piece full stock, has no patch box, and just plain fixed sights. I don't have a clue what twist the barrel might be, but I'm going to assume it is for PRB's. I will probably put all the rest of my post on these two ML's in the craftsman section, because I plan on redoing the stocks and barrels before I try fireing them. They were both finished with bright blue barrels, and have fairly light colored stocks. I'm going to strip both and do the barrels in brown, and go for a much darker stock like my A & H mountain rifle. I'm sorry i don't have any pics to post at this time, but I will get some up just as soon as I can. If anyone has any idea what they are date and model wise from my description, please let me know. I'm deffinately gonna have to find a way to give the lady a proper thank you. She refused to let me pay her anything for them, and just flat out gave them to me. Yep....this was a realy good week.
Blacky Montana,
SASS #19953
It appears I had some pretty good luck this week. A lady that works with my wife, was aware that I enjoy BP hunting through conversations with she has had with her. The lady was doing some cleaning out of her spare or storage bedroom, and came upon a set of CVA muzzleloaders that had belonged to her husband who passed away a few years ago. They were originally kits that had been given to him as a gift. One is a rifle with the two piece full stock (little brass spacer in betwwen the two stocks), and a matching pistol simular to like a Kentucky or Frontier pistol. Both in .45 cal. He had put them together, and then just used them for decorations in his office. Neither have ever been fired. The best time line I can put on them is between 10 and 20 years ago. She said that after he recieved them as gifts, they had sat in the closet for a few years before he ever put them together. She added that it was maybe 10 to 15 years ago when he finally assembeled them. The stamp on both barrels reads... Connecticut Valley Arms Inc.. under that.. Black Powder Only .45 cal.. So how old these are I realy dont know for sure. Both are percussion. As I said before, the rifle has the two piece full stock, has no patch box, and just plain fixed sights. I don't have a clue what twist the barrel might be, but I'm going to assume it is for PRB's. I will probably put all the rest of my post on these two ML's in the craftsman section, because I plan on redoing the stocks and barrels before I try fireing them. They were both finished with bright blue barrels, and have fairly light colored stocks. I'm going to strip both and do the barrels in brown, and go for a much darker stock like my A & H mountain rifle. I'm sorry i don't have any pics to post at this time, but I will get some up just as soon as I can. If anyone has any idea what they are date and model wise from my description, please let me know. I'm deffinately gonna have to find a way to give the lady a proper thank you. She refused to let me pay her anything for them, and just flat out gave them to me. Yep....this was a realy good week.
Blacky Montana,
SASS #19953