The term "poor boy"is a modern one which has developed within the past 30-40 years to describe a very small{less than 5% of those I have seen in 44 years of handling Tennessee guns}number of rifles minus butt pieces,nose caps,rear entry pipes,and with simple bent iron tricker guards.They are often somewhat crude in construction as compared with the plain but well architectured Tennessee rifles with finely forged hardware,good wood selection, high quality English locks,sometimes with banana boxes,and nice lines.Some of these higher quality guns are better than others but most are good to high quality rifles.I have even seen one or two with silver inlays and many have silver plates inlaid in the barrels for a signature and the name of the first owner.There are one or two in Accoutrements I,II,and III and a fine Jacob Gross rifle in Merril Lindsay's book,"The Kentucky Rifle".
The term "barn gun" is another bit of late terminology which was unknown until the last few years and to be honest,I don't have a clue as to what it really means.Erik Kettenberg introduced us to the "Schimmel gun" and I understand Chuck Dixon has copyrighted the term.This is a term which "apparently" refers to a late 18th or early 19th utility gun found primarily in the general southeastern Pennsylvania
[url] area.Again[/url] I don't know its function or whether it falls within any recognized school of Pennsylvania gun making.It's area seems to be fairly localized.
Both the "poor boy" and the "barn" guns are in my opinion abberations and represent a very small number of old guns.I realize that a number of vendors and builders are advertising and selling "poor boy" guns and parts appealing to the desire for a "plain ole mountain rifle like Dan'l Boone or others of that ilk carried" and that's fine. As Abraham Lincoln once observed,
"People who like this sort of thing will find this sort
of thing the sort of thing they like"
That's my take on "poor boys" and "barn rifles" and while I'm at it "canoe guns,blanket guns,ranger style cut down bess carbines,Tulle carbines",and other fantasy guns should be considered in the same vein.So get in line with those fantasy guns at the ready,I haven't seen a real firing squad in years.
Tom Patton
God does love a heretic :thumbsup: