I ordered up a new reproduction M1800 Harpers Ferry short rifle from Jess at The Rifle Shop in August, 2007. It showed up on the door step two years later, almost to the day.
This is a reproduction of the rifle that surfaced in St. Louis, that is believed to have accompanied the Lewis & Clark expedition. This rifle is well described in the May 2006 issue of We Proceeded on, the journal of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. The rifle has a serial number of 15, the lowest observed to date for any M1803 rifle. As there are significant differences between this rifle and later M1803 rifles, historians Cowan & Keller gave it the M1800 designation.
The reproduction is beautifully made, and worth the wait! Jess used a lovely piece of walnut for the stock, with plenty of subtle tiger stripes. The barrel, lock, and stock are well marked, and indeed the lock was cast from impressions of that of rifle #15. The rifle is slimmer than first pattern M1803s, with a smaller and differently shaped lock, shorter patch box, buckhorn rear sight, hollow barrel rib, and differently shaped stock. It does not have provisions for a sling, and looks nothing like the military arms of the time. It more resembles a light hunting rifle, or British officer's fusil. Compared to my TRS Baker rifle, it looks very elegant indeed!
Jess and son Mike finished the tang, rib, and 33" barrel in brown. The brass is bright, with the lock color case hardened. Screws and barrel wedge are fire blued. The stock's finish is deep and glossy, and appers to be finished in many coats of boiled linseed oil.
I have yet to shoot it, but it handles beautifully and sparks extremely well. I'll post photos shortly.
This is a reproduction of the rifle that surfaced in St. Louis, that is believed to have accompanied the Lewis & Clark expedition. This rifle is well described in the May 2006 issue of We Proceeded on, the journal of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. The rifle has a serial number of 15, the lowest observed to date for any M1803 rifle. As there are significant differences between this rifle and later M1803 rifles, historians Cowan & Keller gave it the M1800 designation.
The reproduction is beautifully made, and worth the wait! Jess used a lovely piece of walnut for the stock, with plenty of subtle tiger stripes. The barrel, lock, and stock are well marked, and indeed the lock was cast from impressions of that of rifle #15. The rifle is slimmer than first pattern M1803s, with a smaller and differently shaped lock, shorter patch box, buckhorn rear sight, hollow barrel rib, and differently shaped stock. It does not have provisions for a sling, and looks nothing like the military arms of the time. It more resembles a light hunting rifle, or British officer's fusil. Compared to my TRS Baker rifle, it looks very elegant indeed!
Jess and son Mike finished the tang, rib, and 33" barrel in brown. The brass is bright, with the lock color case hardened. Screws and barrel wedge are fire blued. The stock's finish is deep and glossy, and appers to be finished in many coats of boiled linseed oil.
I have yet to shoot it, but it handles beautifully and sparks extremely well. I'll post photos shortly.