William Hawken made rifles in Maryland. Other than being the younger brother of Jacob and Sameul he had nothing to do with J & S HawkenAccording to the bottom pic it was converted to a percussion, pic of book it comes from, Gun is in the NRA museum
It shows that there were full stock flintlock Hawken style rifles made, by a brother of the Hawken brothers from Missouri, so people that say a flintlock Hawken rifle wasn't made and that its not PC, this proves they are wrong, if you want to argue over which Hawken made it that's up to you, for those of us that want to use a full stock flintlock around thread counters here is the proof they were made, that's all that matters, and given the time frame the JS Hawken brothers started making and when percussion guns came into being, there is no way that flints weren't made by them, my .02 you can argue with yourself because your opinion doesn't trump factsWilliam Hawken made rifles in Maryland. Other than being the younger brother of Jacob and Sameul he had nothing to do with J & S Hawken
I believe this to be correct, they were Swiss IIRC.From what I remember reading about the Hawken family, the original spelling was Hochen.
One of those touchy is it blue or green questionsIt shows that there were full stock flintlock Hawken style rifles made, by a brother of the Hawken brothers from Missouri, so people that say a flintlock Hawken rifle wasn't made and that its not PC, this proves they are wrong, if you want to argue over which Hawken made it that's up to you, for those of us that want to use a full stock flintlock around thread counters here is the proof they were made, that's all that matters, and given the time frame the JS Hawken brothers started making and when percussion guns came into being, there is no way that flints weren't made by them, my .02 you can argue with yourself because your opinion doesn't trump facts
As far as I'm aware, the Hawken brothers that set up shop in St. Louis, Mo., only made half stock percussion that was strong enough to withstand the rigors of the plains, indians, and griz. That was the era that percussion was new, and sought after due to more reliability.It is a very well-known fact that members of the Hawken family made flint rifles and I don't think it was ever disputed. The only questions I have ever seen are, were the fully developed plains style rifles made by the Hawkens ever made in flint, or in full stock.
Yep, just addressing the fact that it is well known and not disputed that there were earlier flintlock guns made by the Hawken family.As far as I'm aware, the Hawken brothers that set up shop in St. Louis, Mo., only made half stock percussion that was strong enough to withstand the rigors of the plains, indians, and griz. That was the era that percussion was new, and sought after due to more reliability.
I see llRC on here a lot. Can you tell me what that stands for? Never been able to figure that one out. Thank you!I believe this to be correct, they were Swiss IIRC.
The Germanic name morphed into its popular form as the family became more “American”.
I think I can substantiate this with genealogy that my brother in law has collected on our family for years.
My grandmothers maiden name was “Hawkins” and she hailed from Missouri SE of St Louis, born in 1892.
A couple of generations prior to her the name “Hawkens” shows up in the the tree. He was able to trace her family to Germany in the far past and the name “Hokkens” appears.
We haven’t been able to connect any dots to the riflebuilder Hawken clan but given the proximity of locations I would not be surprised if there was a link.
Thank you!! Never could figure that one out.If I Remeber Correctly
The question isn't whether the Hawken family made flintlocks, but rather if Sam and Jake made flintlock plains and mountain rifles. And since you are rather new here, you likely didn't know that. No need to get snippy about it.It shows that there were full stock flintlock Hawken style rifles made, by a brother of the Hawken brothers from Missouri, so people that say a flintlock Hawken rifle wasn't made and that its not PC, this proves they are wrong, if you want to argue over which Hawken made it that's up to you, for those of us that want to use a full stock flintlock around thread counters here is the proof they were made, that's all that matters, and given the time frame the JS Hawken brothers started making and when percussion guns came into being, there is no way that flints weren't made by them, my .02 you can argue with yourself because your opinion doesn't trump facts
What it shows is a rifle made by William Hawken in the style of rifles made around Hagerstown, Maryland. There are rifles made by Christian Hawken during the golden age in the style of Hagerstown Maryland. Christian's father having come here from Switzerland probably made Jaeger style rifles. I don't think anyone disputes that the members of the Hawken family made flintlocks, but that in no way proves that the firm J & S Hawken made them.It shows that there were full stock flintlock Hawken style rifles made, by a brother of the Hawken brothers from Missouri, so people that say a flintlock Hawken rifle wasn't made and that its not PC, this proves they are wrong, if you want to argue over which Hawken made it that's up to you, for those of us that want to use a full stock flintlock around thread counters here is the proof they were made, that's all that matters, and given the time frame the JS Hawken brothers started making and when percussion guns came into being, there is no way that flints weren't made by them, my .02 you can argue with yourself because your opinion doesn't trump facts
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