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I envision a father, whose son has a hand defect, going to a local 'smith and after describing his son's affliction the smith says I can build him a rifle he can use.

Then he used his skills as a master craftsman to create a 'one of' rifle. I never cared for the term 'one off'.

Interesting piece, amazing what some people can envision and others create.
 
Just incredible! A real work of art. Thanks Carbon 6 for locating and posting the link. I see that it has a feather hole even though it's a percussion gun and also has provision for a (missing) nipple pick.

Glaize is still a prominent name in Winchester today.
 
Thanks for tracking down the link C6. I think I've seen that link before. I still am in the camp that its special purpose built as I can't hold my rifles imagining the trigger guard is in the spot it is on that lock and make it work at all. Super cool. I guess we'll never know but it's fun to speculate! It could be as simple as a bench shooting setup where one wouldn't hold the wrist at all but use the trigger with your hand disengaged from the gun. I don't know. Neat lock.
 
Those inventive Yankees. Creative conversion, which seems to minimize re-inletting.
A possible reversible conversion, or his idea for a simpler clean conversion?
 
Maybe made for this sort of shooting? Trigger pincher? I've seen it in other pictures.

trigger pincher.jpg
 
The old timers did a lot of experimenting back then. With mechanisms and how to shoot more accurate.

Yep. That shot I took in Nov was to the left in my stand and I held the top of the comb with my right hand and pinched the trigger with my left, muzzle braced with a monopod. It's the way I often do bench work. Steady, and you can get good cheek placement without getting all contorted on the bench.
 
The link seems to think it was done that way so as to leave more wood in the breech / lock area for strength. It IS exceedingly thin and elegant as well as decorated in a way that takes a back seat to nobody.
 
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