• This community needs YOUR help today. We rely 100% on Supporting Memberships to fund our efforts. With the ever increasing fees of everything, we need help. We need more Supporting Members, today. Please invest back into this community. I will ship a few decals too in addition to all the account perks you get.



    Sign up here: https://www.muzzleloadingforum.com/account/upgrades
  • Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

HC barrel finish for a 1770s...

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
The truth is... nobody seems to know, or can agree, on the period correct barrel’s finish.

As such, chose whichever you enjoy the best. None are more correct than the other, and personal preference is fine.
Hi,
Going back to the OP's original question. There is no evidence that Pennsylvania rifles made during the 1770s were browned or rust blued. There is evidence that they were left bright, but of course that "bright" would rapidly tarnish into gray brown through use. It is not a case that one idea is as correct as any other. We have direct evidence for one conclusion although the absoluteness of that evidence can be debated. The other conclusion has no direct evidence among 1770s Pennsylvania rifle makers regardless of what went on in Britain, bigger cities, or in the 19th century.

dave
 
Hi,
Going back to the OP's original question. There is no evidence that Pennsylvania rifles made during the 1770s were browned or rust blued. There is evidence that they were left bright, but of course that "bright" would rapidly tarnish into gray brown through use. It is not a case that one idea is as correct as any other. We have direct evidence for one conclusion although the absoluteness of that evidence can be debated. The other conclusion has no direct evidence among 1770s Pennsylvania rifle makers regardless of what went on in Britain, bigger cities, or in the 19th century.

dave

Interesting. But would the chaps had scoured their pieces to brighten them up yet? Today, many are enbrowned from age and sitting about for perhaps decades on end. If a man, or lady, paid so much for a piece would he not be expected to keep it well shined? We know it was done in the military. Such things are tricky to know, so much time has passed. 🕰
 
I will slightly change the question. If you were in Indian territory would you want a bright shiny gun?
Yes I would. The idea that folks were skulking around each other tree to tree is Hollywood. Campfire smoke , deep horse tracks, chopping wood - all these are signs detected easily and a mile away.

What sorts of trade goods sold best to Native Americans? Shiny and bright.

When we try to apply modern ideas and world views to the past, it does not work.

It then follows that reasoning, “I’d want THIS, so it stands to reason that THEY wanted THIS, and so THIS must have been prevalent” just does not work out.
 
When we try to apply modern ideas and world views to the past, it does not work.

It then follows that reasoning, “I’d want THIS, so it stands to reason that THEY wanted THIS, and so THIS must have been prevalent” just does not work out.
Yes. This bears repeating, over and over, on so many topics here. Not, sure why this concept is so hard for some people to grasp.
 
Yes. This bears repeating, over and over, on so many topics here. Not, sure why this concept is so hard for some people to grasp.

Even though we have a strong interest in traditional muzzleloaders and the time when they were used, we still live in the here and now. It is hard for us to separate the two. We still bring with us our experience and knowledge when we try to go back and imagine or study how things were 150 and more years ago. It is hard to imagine how they did not know this or that they didn't want X because our custom is to want it now. The Hawken rifle is a good example related to the fur trade era. In the 1970s us wanna be mountain men all wanted a Hawken even though it came in late in the era in very limited numbers.
 
Pennsylvania Gazette
May 24, 1775
"Mr. Brown also relates, that two regular officers of the 26th regiment, now in Canada, applied to two Indians, one a head warrior of the Caughanawaga tribe, to go out with them on a hunt, to the south and east of the rivers St. Lawrence and Sorrel, and pressing the Indians farther and farther on said course, they at length arrived at Cohass, where the Indians say they were stopt and interrogated by the inhabitants, to whom they pretended they were only on a hunt, which the inhabitants (as the Indians told Mr. Brown) replied must be false, as no hunters used silver (bright) barrelled guns".


Just found this thread, and found it interesting that nobody commented on this very telling note. I also think that plmeek has a strong point that some "browned" rifles were invariably made/sold.

There seems to be agreement that some rifle builders in America at the time were aware of the process used in Europe to brown rifles. I find it 100% impossible that they did not mention/suggest the process to their customers. The builders were engaged in the business of selling a product that had competition from other builders. Technology will advance, social morays may changed, but the human animal is still the human animal, and a man engaged in selling something to another person will invariably offer every option/enhancement that he has access to offer. Do I have evidence of said rifles? No. Am I engaged in wishful thinking? No. There is evidence that these guys were in the business of selling rifles in a somewhat competitive market, and had access to a process that could be sold as an enhancement. I've sold CNC machines for over 40 years and have a strong working idea on how the selling (and buying) process works in people's mind. These guys may have been rifle builders but they were also businessmen. As Don Rickles said in Kelly's Heroes "Business is Business".
 
I'm most interested in what in the white might be on a basic unadorned long rifle of the late 18th cent. Would one have been draw filed and left that way or polished to a higher shine? I imagine a poor boy barrel and lock would have been left white and allowed to take on color as it aged, but not polished bright as that would likely be an extra cost. . I have a barrel I've been hauling around for about 40 years. It was white, but not bright to begin with. It now has a grayed patina. The rifles that interest me are not the fancy carved and engraved style, which would cost three to four times the price of the most basic rifles being made, but the rifles of the small subsistence farmers and working men. I'm thinking these most often would have been white, but how bright?
 
Poor boy rifles really do not appear in the 1700s in any number. Rifles were far more expensive than smoothbores. If someone needed an inexpensive gun a rifle was not in their budget.
There are a good many original 1770s era colonial American rifles finished in the white of showing brown only above the stock line. The brown we see today on the top flats often stops on the side flats - it is patina from years of use in all sorts of weather.
 
The rifles that interest me are not the fancy carved and engraved style, which would cost three to four times the price of the most basic rifles being made, but the rifles of the small subsistence farmers and working men. I'm thinking these most often would have been white, but how bright?

The problem with this thinking is that it is not based in fact. A rifle would have been expensive. Period. There was no sense in getting a "plain" rifle, especially since a good gunsmith could carve, or even engrave (to an extent) a gun pretty quickly and easily. For an experienced gunsmith, carving does not take very long... very little time, actually. It would not be difficult, nor expensive to do. It was expected. This changed in the 19th century, as styles changed (unfortunately...), and as economics changed. But the 18th century "Po boy" rifle I think is basically a fantasy.

There are "relatively plain" rifles (or rifle-type guns) of the late 18th century. My opinion is that to a great extent, this may have been pretty much the standard level gun. But these existing guns still have all their normal hardware, and still have at least some carving in the normal places. Fore end mouldings, "teardrops", some kind of carving behind the breech tang.... Basically only omitting the carving around the cheekpiece.

As for barrels (and locks) being left white, that was pretty much S.O.P. Charcoal blueing was done, but not very commonly. Purposeful browning in the late 18th century seems to be pretty well limited to fine grade guns with Damascus/twist barrels, the browning showing off the pattern. I believe that for the most part, existing 18th century American rifles with browned barrels got that way simply from use (and abuse). It doesn't take very long for a rifle barrel to start turning brown. All I have to do is handle one, and it rusts up in short order. I will have a pretty heavily patinated rifle barrel before I'm even finished making the rifle! Without doing anything but scrubbing off the heaviest, reddest rust.

DSCN0189_800x450.JPG


Keeping the barrel bright would actually require maintenance. As I recall, British soldiers were issued brick dust to keep their barrels scrubbed bright and shiny. A hunter may have desired the barrel to go brown (as evidenced by the above PA Gazette article), but I am doubting that it was really done in the 18th century much on purpose by the gunsmith. I may be wrong on that, but that's how it seems to me.
 
Hi,
Chris, I mean Stophel, is absolutely right. This myth that there is a lost cohort of poor boy guns and plain guns out there during the 18th century is pernicious. It fails to appreciate the norms of the times and it ignores the ledger records that exists and the fact that so many "fancy" guns were not wall hangers. They show tremendous wear from shooting, particularly those converted to percussion. Why convert if the gun is not being used? Look at the wear on the Edward Marshall rifle owned by a working man. If you want to reproduce typical and historically accurate Rev War period or colonial period rifles, you need to be able to carve. And if you can't, you would never have been able to complete an apprenticeship at the time.

dave
 
Last edited:
Back
Top