Restoration and refinishing are seperate issues.
We are not talking about taking a fine and scarce origional and stripping all the origional finish from it, chopping down the barrel and hacking away at the stock in an attempt to "modernize" the gun.
We are talking about a repair that returns an item to its origional condition for use or eduactional purpose. Blending the new into the old, not making the old look new!
You do not have a one of a kind item. Hundreds of thousands of these muskets were imported to the U.S. The value of origional Charlivilles in average condition is not much more than the value of new production repros!
This is one of those items that you see on the Antiques Road Show where the guy brings in his treasured and valued family heirloom and finds out his $50 gun is actually worth...$50!
Unless you are a skilled builder and familiar with the restoration process I would go slowly with the duplication of wood and metal.
The standard rule of restoration is to never do anything to an item that can not be undone.
It was a very good idea to ask first. I would urge you to seek other opinions from hands on apraisers.
We are just guys on the computer. If you continue reading from these threads you will become convinced, by some of the rediculious comments and answers, that many of us have never fired a gun in our lives!
Just seek out people that really know what they are dealing with. The guy at the local gun shop probably does not. Likewise, the local antiques dealer probably does not. If either of them do know guns they will always undervalue an item in hopes of adding to the value of their own collection. Find a museum with a reasonable firearms collection and befriend the curator. He will probably have nothing to lose or gain and a more ethical attitude.
:hatsoff: