Benjamin_Martin
32 Cal
Major update — in the process of taking off the brass barrel bands to clean them I discovered that the insides of the barrel bands are engraved with “MOORE N YORK”. In my research, I found that Moore was a prominent gun and gun parts manufacturer from the 1820s-1850s, and that many of his guns/parts went to the Confederacy during the Civil War.
Without the barrel bands on the gun, it looks almost identical to this British EIC Officer’s Fusil (https://www.ima-usa.com/products/or...ficers-fusil-circa-1810?variant=5538386313254), with the exception of the barrel and stock being slightly longer as well as the lock plate having a more “banana” and pointed shape, likely because it is an earlier model, likely later second half of the 18th century. I am now interested to restore this gun to how it would have originally been.
Without the barrel bands on the gun, it looks almost identical to this British EIC Officer’s Fusil (https://www.ima-usa.com/products/or...ficers-fusil-circa-1810?variant=5538386313254), with the exception of the barrel and stock being slightly longer as well as the lock plate having a more “banana” and pointed shape, likely because it is an earlier model, likely later second half of the 18th century. I am now interested to restore this gun to how it would have originally been.