Agreed on British origin however something doesn’t seem to add up. First from the minimal research I’ve done, the vast majority of firearms for trade in Canadas western fur trade was the Trade Gun, and only those in positions of somewhat power possessed the “sporting” rifles. Second, the Metis folks were thought of as quite low from both whites and natives, until well, well past the glory days of the fur trade. Which begs the question of “where/how did he acquire it from?” Is it possible the painting was from memory and “license” taken with some of the details?
Walk
Thank you for your comments,
Walkingeagle. Your points are well taken.
I would agree that the
majority of guns traded to the Metis and native population of Canada were trade guns and smoothbores. However, as brother
tenngun stated in Post #53, "
Half stock smoothies became popular at the same time." In
Trade Guns of the Hudson's Bay Company 1670-1970, author James S. Gooding offered the following (page 80):
Sorry the text is not complete in the photo, but it shows a delivery, in 1821, of 440 "NW Guns" in addition to a total of 30 (5 + 5 + 20) "Neat" fowling pieces, with "ribs," which would indicate half-stocks. He also shows photos of one, on page 77:
Sorry about the blurry image. Anyway, this is a half-stocked "fine gun." Note that in past times, "gun" meant a smoothbore. Rifles were called rifles.
Peter Rindisbacher, who painted that wonderful image of the Metis family, also made this drawing:
This clearly shows a half-stocked flintlock. The barrel appears to be round, rather than octagonal. The artist went to the trouble of showing us a checkered wrist and two lock bolts, yet he does not show a rear sight. I'm guessing it was probably a smoothbore.
One other thing that I was not going to mention, but since it came up, that painting of the Metis family was the subject of a little controversy a while back. Rindisbacher was Swiss, and came to Selkirk's Red River colony in 1821, and left in 1826. He was just a teenager when he arrived, but he had a widely recognized gift for painting. He didn't paint for free, either. At least some of his work was painted on commission. As for that image of the Metis family, it was one of several. Here is the image you showed us previously, with the half-stocked flintlock, that
might be a rifle, or it might be a "fine gun.":
This is another image which appears to show the same man and woman, but this time with a boy:
It's hard to say much about the gun, except that it's a fullstock. The man is wearing his powder horn on the opposite side, and the lady is smoking a "Micmac" styled pipe instead of an elbow pipe, as in the first image.
Here is a third picture, for comparison:
This looks like the same family as above, but judging from the triggerguard on that firearm, I would say it's likely a Northwest gun. As an aside, the kid appears to be wearing a baseball cap.
Which weapon was the man actually carrying when the first sketch was made? Did he own two different guns? We don't know. However, we do know that Rindisbacher would sometimes employ some artistic license. I read an interview recently which indicated a patron wanted Rindisbacher to paint an image of his home and property, to show the folks back home. The man owned no cows, but wanted the artist to put some in the picture. The point being that young Rindisbacher might change a few details if it pleased the client.
I would recommend this monograph to anyone interested in Peter Rindisbacker or the Red River colony, or First Nations people of Canada. It is a 56 page PDF that includes a number of this painter's images:
Rindisbacher in Manitoba This was where I found the image of "Hunting Wolves on the Prairie."
Anyway, I hope we can agree that there were half-stocked flintlocks in Canada in the first half of the 19th century. Did any of these make it down to St. Louis and into the Hawken shop for repair? Did the brothers Hawken get any inspiration from this type of long arm? I don't know. We do know that Canadian voyageurs carried a French lady all the way down the Mississippi in birchbark canoes, made a left turn at the river's mouth, and delivered the lady to her husband in Mobile. So, there were birchbark canoes in Mobile Bay at one point. Many things are possible.
I'm just wondering if we're going to start seeing baseball caps at upcoming rendezvous...
Best regards,
Notchy Bob