That doesn't help me, guys.
So, let's say a shipment of English trade guns comes to Philadelphia, PA. All the guns have British marks. They are then divided, with some being sent out to Pittsburgh, and some sent south to Savannah, GA. Many of the Georgia guns made it into the hands of the Creeks, the Seminoles, and the Cherokees. Is the same gun shipped to the colony of Georgia a NW gun? Or a SE gun? Or just a common trade fusil/musket/fowler?
Would James Oglethorpe, who founded Georgia and fought to keep the Spanish out, know the type as a NW gun?
If so, what makes it a NW gun? Is there a specific pattern? In the document above I see "English Pattern" and "Lancaster" style mentioned. They certainly are not the same. What other "patterns" might there be? Or, is a NW gun simply any trade gun in the more northernly areas of North America, and it would be called by another name elsewhere?
Maybe we're just stuck on semantics here. But IMO the term "Northwest Gun" is overused and I'm not sure that it isn't a more modern term.
Please, show me or direct me to the historic text, prior to 1800, that mentions a "NW" gun.
And I do apologize for hijacking this thread.