Shooty McShootface
32 Cal
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2021
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 12
Hi all.
I am posting in the hope of finding out some information on a relic that I found. The location is West of Ireland, an isolated farmhouse. I know that the occupant had taken part in the Rineen ambush in 1920 during the War of Independence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rineen_ambush
However, locals have told me that the household was very republican, so likely this ethos was carried over from previous generations. While cleaning up, I found a relic of what appears to be a muzzle loader in the rafters of an old cowshed. Badly degraded and rusted, the moving parts not found and the stock missing. I am thinking if this was a farmyard tool like a shotgun, or for hunting, it would likely not have been hidden outside in the rafters but kept inside the house. Yet, as a flintlock, it is too old for the War of Independence in the 20th century, rather an item from the 19th.
Can anyone help identify this rusted relic? The length of the barrel is 82.5cm or 32.5 inch, the top of barrel circa 2cm. Some more features, it has flat sides on the stock end, rounding toward the business end and a circular post sight. There appears to be a small protrusion to attach to the stock on the underside, and a percussion cap hole on the top right. I found a length of metal folded on three sides that seems to fit to the barrel. I would really enjoy to know what it is, if that is still possible. No manufacturer engravings or stamps are readable due to the rusted pitting.
Many thanks for your time and thoughts.
I am posting in the hope of finding out some information on a relic that I found. The location is West of Ireland, an isolated farmhouse. I know that the occupant had taken part in the Rineen ambush in 1920 during the War of Independence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rineen_ambush
However, locals have told me that the household was very republican, so likely this ethos was carried over from previous generations. While cleaning up, I found a relic of what appears to be a muzzle loader in the rafters of an old cowshed. Badly degraded and rusted, the moving parts not found and the stock missing. I am thinking if this was a farmyard tool like a shotgun, or for hunting, it would likely not have been hidden outside in the rafters but kept inside the house. Yet, as a flintlock, it is too old for the War of Independence in the 20th century, rather an item from the 19th.
Can anyone help identify this rusted relic? The length of the barrel is 82.5cm or 32.5 inch, the top of barrel circa 2cm. Some more features, it has flat sides on the stock end, rounding toward the business end and a circular post sight. There appears to be a small protrusion to attach to the stock on the underside, and a percussion cap hole on the top right. I found a length of metal folded on three sides that seems to fit to the barrel. I would really enjoy to know what it is, if that is still possible. No manufacturer engravings or stamps are readable due to the rusted pitting.
Many thanks for your time and thoughts.