Rifle Style Identification

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

progdor

32 Cal
Joined
May 23, 2023
Messages
12
Reaction score
18
Location
Texas
I recently came into a fairly high end collection of rifles (builds by Bill Shipman, Bob Harn, Frank Lehto, John Bergmann, Brad Emig, Robert Ashe, etc) and I've started my journey on identifying them....I'm a gun guy, but never into muzzleloading until recently....I've identified several, but there are so many similarities between some of the regional styles I want to make sure I get them right...is there a resource any of you would recommend for newbs to learn about all the styles as I dip my toe into muzzleloading 101?
 

Attachments

  • 20230601_104051.jpg
    8.3 MB
To be completely honest with you they all look the same to me except some are flintlocks or percussion or full stock or half stock. All the little nuances of styles and regions are lost to me. I don't really find it important as some others do. I just shoot them.
 
Man if weren't into muzzleloading before you sure are now.
The more research I do, the more I definitely am getting into it. Most of these will be rehomed at some point, as I am a lefty.....I am mainly helping do research and making sure they get fair value on the resale as we go, but as I go down the rabbit hole, I am feeling the muzzleloading fever starting
 
To be completely honest with you they all look the same to me except some are flintlocks or percussion or full stock or half stock. All the little nuances of styles and regions are lost to me. I don't really find it important as some others do. I just shoot them.
The only two percussion guns I see are the pistol and the fourth gun from the top. All the rest are flintlocks. Nice collection!
 
I am a lefty also but see one I would be interested in, if you decide to sell these in the future and once you figure what you want for them, and the conditions, cal. and things such as that, post them here on the site, really believe you would have no problem selling these on here, very nice-looking collection.
 
All appear somewhat generic, which is neither here nor there. They all look very nice from the photo and the stocks of some of them are gorgeously figured. The thing about "schools" is the way a bit of variation can be found. Schools are a modern concept to help place them in time and place.
 
Best guesses from very limited data presented.

Top (#1): contemporary creative rifle of Germanic influence, meant to be a possible 1770 rifle.

#2: creative early York county/ influenced.

#3 J P Beck-ish 1770s rifle.
IMG_0396.jpeg
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0388.jpeg
    8.3 MB

Latest posts

Back
Top