And buying an Indian Fusil. At 68 years old I'm not going to fight in any more reenactments so considering replacing my 1st Pattern Long Land with a Fusil which I believe would be more accurate with a civilian persona (1760s). Not sure if a civilian (possibly a militia man) would have picked up and kept a Bess during and after the F&I War.
Any ideas?
You need to be more specific on the "where" that your persona has...,
Maryland had armory in Annapolis, and Maryland issued out colony owned Bess to some of the men on the frontier, near Ft. Frederick and Anti Eatam (Antietam).
In Pennsylvania there was no militia system, so very unlikely you would have a Bess there.
In Virginia, the men were to provide their own arms, but the British didn't sell off a bunch of Bess after the F&I, per se. At a lot of the militia musters in Virginia the men declared they didn't have a gun..., there was little if any penalty for not complying with a militia requirement of having a gun and ammo. One very bad historian declared that the militia muster records = a lack of firearms in the hands of the Virginians.
What it actually meant was the men were exempt from serving in the militia since they claimed they didn't have a gun. So the colony would need to provide them with a gun and with ammo IF the colony made them serve. Otherwise they'd serve for no pay, AND pay for their own ball and powder...,
Buying a musket from the British Army or from the colony after the Brits gave the musket to Virginia would've negated that excuse... colony records would show the purchase...
A trade musket in VA or in North Carolina would be a good choice. Cheaper to shoot, generally lighter, cheaper to buy. Heck one pattern was so well used in North Carolina that it's called a Carolina Gun today.
LD