How many out there?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

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

grey8833

40 Cal.
Joined
Dec 6, 2005
Messages
205
Reaction score
38
Location
Massachusetts
I was wondering, having added three to the total myself, does anyone have a good guess as to how many reproduction muzzle loading rifles are out there in the U.S.? That is both Kits and Finished Made, either flintlock or percussion? Not including the pistols or revolvers. Got to be more than a few...

Grey
 
I was wondering, having added three to the total myself, does anyone have a good guess as to how many reproduction muzzle loading rifles are out there in the U.S.? That is both Kits and Finished Made, either flintlock or percussion? Not including the pistols or revolvers. Got to be more than a few...

Grey


No idea how many may be out there. But, as a small example, TC made close to a million just of their Hawken model.
 
I couldn't even tell you how many I have, let alone how many are out there!
 
Why do you want to know?
Why not?

You know, the Government gives figures of how many million guns are "out there" in public hands, but they only count modern firearms because BP guns generally are not considered to be firearms, legally. If you add both, yah, probably in the bazillions. LOL
 
It is known, how many. At least roughly. Some sources have finally started using more realistic numbers for total firearms in America ... and that is more than 700 million. Seems I read in one source two years ago that of the total, about 30 million are muzzleloaders of all sorts, antiques and replicas.

So, a million, a gazillion, a bazillion ... just figure "behind every blade of grass."
 
Before John Bivins was cited by the government for not paying the Pittman Roberts tax on the "Bicentennial " rifles he built before the mid 1980's, the vast majority of rifles made by hobby m/l gunsmiths were done so clandestinely.. After the Congress acted , and said production under 50 guns per year was not under the P/R tax. The cloud of secrecy put over the earlier industry remained for years. How many rifles went home and were not signed out of fear of the govt.??? We will never know. .........oldwood
 
Why not?

You know, the Government gives figures of how many million guns are "out there" in public hands, but they only count modern firearms because BP guns generally are not considered to be firearms, legally. If you add both, yah, probably in the bazillions. LOL
It's an educated guess at best. No way of knowing how many guns are handed down over the years or given to friends. I think there is allot more than big brother wants to admit to.
 
Before John Bivins was cited by the government for not paying the Pittman Roberts tax on the "Bicentennial " rifles he built before the mid 1980's, the vast majority of rifles made by hobby m/l gunsmiths were done so clandestinely.. After the Congress acted , and said production under 50 guns per year was not under the P/R tax. The cloud of secrecy put over the earlier industry remained for years. How many rifles went home and were not signed out of fear of the govt.??? We will never know. .........oldwood
It is speculated that many old mid-19th century southern rifles were unsigned because the makers did not want to be identified by the federal government as making arms for the Confederacy. Even after the war, members of the general population in the south were not allowed to have arms, so it is likely the practice of not signing handmade guns continued.

It could be argued that backwoods gunsmiths might not have had stamps for signing their guns, but if they really wanted their names on the guns, I believe they would have contrived a way to do it.

I had heard several times about some issues between John Bivins and the Federal Government, but I didn't know the nature of the dispute until now. Thank you.

Best regards,

Notchy Bob
 
Back
Top