Well, I thought I remembered a cursory mention of leather for patch material, one sometimes reads in some accounts after they first mention using linen for patching. I thought it may have been in the quote below that forum member Elnathan so generously provided, but it is not.
James Audubon, c1810, describing his host preparing to go raccoon hunting:
"”¦ He blows through his rifle to ascertain that it is clear, examines his flint, and thrusts a feather into the touch-hole. To a leathern bag swung at his side is attached a powder-horn; his sheath-knife is there also; below hangs a narrow strip of homespun linen. He takes from his bag a bullet, pulls with his teeth the wooden stopper from his powder-horn, lays the ball in one hand, and with the other pours the powder upon it until it is just overtopped. Raising the horn to his mouth, he again closes it with the stopper, and restores it to its place. He introduces the powder into the tube; springs the box of his gun, greases the "patch" over with some melted tallow, or damps it; then places it on the honey-combed muzzle of his piece. The bullet is placed on the patch over the bore, and pressed with the handle of the knife, which now trims the edge of the linen. The elastic hickory rod, held with both hands, smoothly pushes the ball to its bed; once, twice, thrice has it rebounded. The rifle leaps as it were into the hunters arms, the feather is drawn from the touch-hole, the powder fills the pan, which is closed. “Now I’m ready,” cries the woodsman”¦.
Journals, Vol. 2, (1972 reprint), page 492.
A GREAT place to look for period information on period guns, manufacture, usage, etc., etc, is in "An Essay on Shooting," by William Cleator but published by Tho. Cadell in 1789. For this inquiry, it is best to look in Chapter X of that book, “Of Rifle Barrels,”on page 123.
Page 131 is the page we are looking for:
“Besides the method of loading, by driving down the ball with an Iron Rammer, there are several others which we shall mention. In Germany they sometimes charge them in the following manner;
a piece of thin leather or fustian is cut of a circular shape, and is so large as to cover a little more than one half the ball; this piece is then greased on one side, and being placed over the muzzle, the ball is laid upon it, and both thrust down together; by this means the leather or fustian enters in the rifles, and the bullet being firmly embraced by it, acquires the proper rotary motion in its passage through the barrel. If this method be equally effectual, it is certainly more easy and expeditious than the method already described. “
http://books.google.com/books?id=Q...ATM14DQBA&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false
Even though the above book is a Vast Treasure Trove of information, it must be pointed out the Author seems to only have been reporting on the loading method and not actually how he has done it or seen it done. The author does not mention how rifle barrels are loaded in America, but seeing as how the ARW had only been over for about 8 years when the book was written and 9 years when it was published, perhaps that is the reason why?
Personally, I am almost entirely skeptical to the point my BS meter wildly goes off most of the time when I read of leather being used in America for patching material. There is an exception I can think of, but that is going to have to wait for the next post.
Gus