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JV Puleo said:Very conventional. Lane & Read were the big Boston hardware and sporting goods dealer. They also supplied locks with their names on them to gunmakers. They weren't gunmakers and never claimed to be. I'd guess its around 1850, a time at which about 99% of the smoothbore guns in America came from either Britain or Belgium - mostly Britain before the CW. The Belgians seemed to dominate the market after the war.
However... it was specifically made for the American market. I like them myself - I still have a very nice, very heavy tapered octagonal rifle barrel marked "Lane & Read Boston" that must have come from a splendid rifle made for the American market.
(Keep in mind that I live in New England, not 40 miles from Boston, so I've seen this sort of gun much more frequently over the past 40 years than most members of the forum are likely to have had the opportunity to.)
WOW, tapers down to only 3/8" across? Now THAT is a swamped barrel to be sure!gizamo said:... reducing to 1.150 at the sixteen flat transition. At the medial of the Wedding band it measures .375" across, at that point the barrel measures 1.100 and tapers in the round to a .825 muzzle thickness...
laffindog said:Your dimensions sound "off". Recheck that 1.450" at the breech, it sounds really fat. Like almost 1 1/2 inches. And obviously the .375 at the band has to be wrong, that's smaller than the bore.
Mike Brooks said:I used to write antique gun descriptions for a living. I'll do this one for you if you pay me. :wink:
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