Hi Folks,
I have a family heirloom old Manton marked (on locks) percussion shotgun passed down from my GG Grandfather who immigrated from NW Germany (Oldenberg) in the 1860s. Based on where he lived, I assume the shotgun is of Belgian origin, but took some photos in hopes someone who knows far more than I do can help confirm that one way or the other. I took photos of the maker stamps under the barrel and the London Fancy Twist engraving on-top of the barrel. The barrel key caps appear to be silver and there is a small silver plate on the bottom of the buttstock (assumed for initials to be engraved). Let me know if you would like photos of anything else.
This was a farm gun in the mid-west and in overall poor condition. The stock is broken and held together only by the trigger guard. One hammer does not appear to match the gun, etc. It would be nice to return this at least to original configuration, clean and protect it from further degradation. Any help with the following would be appreciated:
1) What glue is recommended to repair the stock?
2) Most of the iron work is engraved, so I am assuming the hammer with the engraving is original and the one with file marks is some sort of local repair job. Does anyone have ideas on where I might find a correct original left hammer?
3) The stock is covered in various contamination (glue, paint, dirt, etc.) any ideas on how to eliminate that without totally destroying the patina?
4) I assume the ramrod once had a metal end-cap as there is a pin going through it, but no cap present. Any leads on that?
4) Any other recommendations you can offer on protecting it or photos of what it should look like, etc.?
Thanks in advance!
I have a family heirloom old Manton marked (on locks) percussion shotgun passed down from my GG Grandfather who immigrated from NW Germany (Oldenberg) in the 1860s. Based on where he lived, I assume the shotgun is of Belgian origin, but took some photos in hopes someone who knows far more than I do can help confirm that one way or the other. I took photos of the maker stamps under the barrel and the London Fancy Twist engraving on-top of the barrel. The barrel key caps appear to be silver and there is a small silver plate on the bottom of the buttstock (assumed for initials to be engraved). Let me know if you would like photos of anything else.
This was a farm gun in the mid-west and in overall poor condition. The stock is broken and held together only by the trigger guard. One hammer does not appear to match the gun, etc. It would be nice to return this at least to original configuration, clean and protect it from further degradation. Any help with the following would be appreciated:
1) What glue is recommended to repair the stock?
2) Most of the iron work is engraved, so I am assuming the hammer with the engraving is original and the one with file marks is some sort of local repair job. Does anyone have ideas on where I might find a correct original left hammer?
3) The stock is covered in various contamination (glue, paint, dirt, etc.) any ideas on how to eliminate that without totally destroying the patina?
4) I assume the ramrod once had a metal end-cap as there is a pin going through it, but no cap present. Any leads on that?
4) Any other recommendations you can offer on protecting it or photos of what it should look like, etc.?
Thanks in advance!