victorio1sw
32 Cal
- Joined
- May 9, 2019
- Messages
- 20
- Reaction score
- 0
Apparently, this rifle "sat" in a museum for a very long time. Both the wood and brass trim are essentially black. The steel parts have acquired a light rust and grime.
A card was attached saying that it belonged to one James W. Patterson. His early locations are unclear – although Tennessee and Beaver Falls, PA are mentioned on this somewhat rambling museum card.
The un-marked barrel is 36-5/8” long, 7/8” flat-to-flat, and the bore measures 0.310” land-to-land with strong six-groove rifling. The three barrel keys and ramrod were missing, which I have begun to replace. I have removed the barrel and found no markings on its hidden surfaces. The barrel has a dovetailed blade front and fixed rear buckhorn sights. The percussion lockplate is marked "Whitmore & Wolff / Pittsburgh" (which dates 1837-52 according to my few gunmaker books).
The DST's work. The buttplate, TG, thimbles, nosecap, and massive patchbox are brass. The fullstock is curly maple with fancy (and peculiar) stamping along the bottom edge of the butt. The patchbox lid was designed to be held open/closed by a long leaf spring which I have not seen used before.
I have two questions. (1) Can anyone identify the maker of this rifle by its various features?
(2) Should this gun be left entirely black, with black wood and lightly-cleaned brass, or with lightly-cleaned wood and brass? By “lightly-cleaned” I mean to leave some black grime on the wood and some brown patina on the brass. Before anyone gets concerned, I am not new to antique gun restoration and proper cleaning. I hate over-cleaned guns (with such as sand paper) as many of you probably do.
A card was attached saying that it belonged to one James W. Patterson. His early locations are unclear – although Tennessee and Beaver Falls, PA are mentioned on this somewhat rambling museum card.
The un-marked barrel is 36-5/8” long, 7/8” flat-to-flat, and the bore measures 0.310” land-to-land with strong six-groove rifling. The three barrel keys and ramrod were missing, which I have begun to replace. I have removed the barrel and found no markings on its hidden surfaces. The barrel has a dovetailed blade front and fixed rear buckhorn sights. The percussion lockplate is marked "Whitmore & Wolff / Pittsburgh" (which dates 1837-52 according to my few gunmaker books).
The DST's work. The buttplate, TG, thimbles, nosecap, and massive patchbox are brass. The fullstock is curly maple with fancy (and peculiar) stamping along the bottom edge of the butt. The patchbox lid was designed to be held open/closed by a long leaf spring which I have not seen used before.
I have two questions. (1) Can anyone identify the maker of this rifle by its various features?
(2) Should this gun be left entirely black, with black wood and lightly-cleaned brass, or with lightly-cleaned wood and brass? By “lightly-cleaned” I mean to leave some black grime on the wood and some brown patina on the brass. Before anyone gets concerned, I am not new to antique gun restoration and proper cleaning. I hate over-cleaned guns (with such as sand paper) as many of you probably do.
Attachments
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-Right-Rev1.jpg23.8 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-Left-Rev1.jpg22.1 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-Lockplate1.jpg101.4 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-Patchbox2-Rev1.jpg77.4 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-PatchboxOpen1.jpg91.3 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-PatchboxOpen3.jpg62.6 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-LeftButt-Rev1.jpg97.5 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-LeftMidsection.jpg89.1 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-BellyDecoration2-Rev1.jpg72.1 KB
-
Whitmire&WolffKentuckyRifle-Muzzle.jpg421.2 KB
Last edited: