• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

English Blunderbuss

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Dave Wallis

36 Cal.
Joined
Dec 20, 2015
Messages
114
Reaction score
168
I was due to collect a Japanese matchlock from a vendor at a local Militaria market at the weekend, unfortunately, there had been a cock-up on their website and the gun had in-fact already been sold. So I sulked off round the market and a chap was just putting his stall out, selling his old collection; Every cloud has a silver lining, they say and lo and behold he bought out this brass barrelled Blunderbuss! Money exchanged hands and home it came. Have you good fellows any idea of a date for this piece? Engraving looks late 18thC but there is a roller frizzen, which, I thought, would indicate 1820 ish.
 

Attachments

  • Hollis Blunderbuss 1.JPG
    Hollis Blunderbuss 1.JPG
    125.6 KB
  • Hollis Blunderbuss 4.JPG
    Hollis Blunderbuss 4.JPG
    108 KB
  • Hollis Blunderbuss 5.JPG
    Hollis Blunderbuss 5.JPG
    104.6 KB
  • Hollis Blunderbuss 7.JPG
    Hollis Blunderbuss 7.JPG
    78.5 KB
  • Hollis Blunderbuss 2.JPG
    Hollis Blunderbuss 2.JPG
    144.6 KB
Last edited:
It can be seen from the NRA list of proof marks that the view and proof stamps date from 1670:
Yep from 1670 to 1811, so with that on the barrel, and the lock tech, likely first decade 19th century or even last decade 18th century. "Napoleonic" might be the adjective to use ???

LD
 
Looks like a bit of a date discrepancy there, 1811 to 1829? Is 1829 a bit late for flintlock?? Maybe Hollis was using an earlier proofed barrel? I suppose the 1820s was a time of changeover from flint to percussion, perhaps the person whom the gun was made for didn't want "one of those new 'detonator' things !"😆
 
Looks like a bit of a date discrepancy there, 1811 to 1829? Is 1829 a bit late for flintlock?? Maybe Hollis was using an earlier proofed barrel? I suppose the 1820s was a time of changeover from flint to percussion, perhaps the person whom the gun was made for didn't want "one of those new 'detonator' things !"😆
I don't know about the U.K. but it wasn't until 1833 that the US military started using percussion caps. That was on the Hall breech loading rifle. It was originally flintlock.
The U.S. military also did not start issuing regular style percussion muzzleloading guns to the troops until the Springfield 1841 Muskets were made.
 
Care must be taken if you wish to shoot this blunderbuss , With a brass barrel which is 200 years old , although the barrel may look in good condition brass that age looses strength and becomes more brittle making it dangerous, there is no way that I would shoot a gun with a 200 year old brass barrel. I have seen blunderbuss brass barrels with hole, bulgers, and cracks
Feltwad
 
Care must be taken if you wish to shoot this blunderbuss , With a brass barrel which is 200 years old , although the barrel may look in good condition brass that age looses strength and becomes more brittle making it dangerous, there is no way that I would shoot a gun with a 200 year old brass barrel. I have seen blunderbuss brass barrels with hole, bulgers, and cracks
Feltwad
Noted, thank you.
 
Looks good to me. In the UK that piece would fetch around £2000.

All the makers tended to make the same flintlock blunderbuss, so either there was a pattern book or they bought in a kit of parts. The spring bayonet and the sliding safety were probably optional extras.
 
Looks good to me. In the UK that piece would fetch around £2000.

All the makers tended to make the same flintlock blunderbuss, so either there was a pattern book or they bought in a kit of parts. The spring bayonet and the sliding safety were probably optional extras.
I best not tell you what I paid for it then!
 
With blunderbusses, you either get very expensive unshootable antiques, or bottom of the barrel head scratcher factory guns like the Traditions abomination.

Too bad Pedersoli doesn’t make an authentic blunderbuss. Getting one custom built is possible but I don’t know of anyone making barrels for them. The one or two guys doing it are dead or no longer taking orders.
 
L
With blunderbusses, you either get very expensive unshootable antiques, or bottom of the barrel head scratcher factory guns like the Traditions abomination.

Too bad Pedersoli doesn’t make an authentic blunderbuss. Getting one custom built is possible but I don’t know of anyone making barrels for them. The one or two guys doing it are dead or no longer taking orders.

Rumor has it that Pecatonica Long Rifle is working with Rice Barrels on putting together a 4-gauge blunderbuss kit that will be available in a couple of months. I expect that to be a pretty good set of parts.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top