• 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

When was the hay day of the Hawken?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Nov 23, 2021
Messages
1,375
Reaction score
1,378
Location
Oregon
Hi, I was hoping if someone could tell me the most popular years the hawken was originally in use? Thanks, Also on a side note, we’re there knock offs and look alikes of the half stock Hawken? Thanks guys.
 
Cynthialee's comment reminded me of a great comment I heard back in 1986 when I was attending the Gulf Coast Mustang owner's club meeting in Pensacola, Florida and the guest speaker was Lee Iacocca (father of the Mustang for those who don't know). Anyway, he started his comments by saying how good it made him feel to see how many people were restoring vintage Mustangs and keeping them from the scrap yards and then he said "yeah, I never dreamed just how beloved that car would someday become. There are more of them on the roads today than we ever originally built!"
 
Hi, I was hoping if someone could tell me the most popular years the hawken was originally in use? Thanks, Also on a side note, we’re there knock offs and look alikes of the half stock Hawken? Thanks guys.
1840's-mid 1850's

But truly there have been more Hawkenesque rifles made in the modern era to the point it could be argued its proper heyday was back in the late 70's to early 2000's.
The most popular years of the Hawken rifle were as Cynthia Lee says. The Hawken rifles were also quite popular during the California Gold Rush of 1849 with the famous endorsement by Captain Marcy.

However, it wasn't knock offs and look alike rifles that sold in far greater quantities than the Hawken rifles, it was the trade rifles in Lancaster architecture by Leman, Deringer and Henry, but in larger calibers such as 54. The English Scroll guard rifles sold for the western plains usage were based on the English Half Stock Sporting Rifle in flint by Tyron, Henry. The Plains caliber rifles sold by Dimick and Creamer and many of the scores of rifle builders selling rifles in Missouri to people crossing the plains. The record indicates that far more people bought the $12 Leman rifle or $10 SxS shotguns than the $35 Hawken Rifle.

The excellent sketchbook by Hanson provides details of these interesting rifles. Might be hard to find.
https://www.amazon.com/trade-rifle-...&sprefix=sketchbook+by+hanson,aps,422&sr=8-15
 
The most popular years of the Hawken rifle were as Cynthia Lee says. The Hawken rifles were also quite popular during the California Gold Rush of 1849 with the famous endorsement by Captain Marcy.

However, it wasn't knock offs and look alike rifles that sold in far greater quantities than the Hawken rifles, it was the trade rifles in Lancaster architecture by Leman, Deringer and Henry, but in larger calibers such as 54. The English Scroll guard rifles sold for the western plains usage were based on the English Half Stock Sporting Rifle in flint by Tyron, Henry. The Plains caliber rifles sold by Dimick and Creamer and many of the scores of rifle builders selling rifles in Missouri to people crossing the plains. The record indicates that far more people bought the $12 Leman rifle or $10 SxS shotguns than the $35 Hawken Rifle.

The excellent sketchbook by Hanson provides details of these interesting rifles. Might be hard to find.
https://www.amazon.com/trade-rifle-...&sprefix=sketchbook+by+hanson,aps,422&sr=8-15
Thank you very much!
 
I’ve been trying to figure out what $25 to 35 1840 dollars would be equivalent to today (2022). The online inflation calculators that I have found don’t go back that far.
 
I’ve been trying to figure out what $25 to 35 1840 dollars would be equivalent to today (2022). The online inflation calculators that I have found don’t go back that far.
I’ve used this calculator and it does go back to 1840. $25 in 1840 → 2022 | Inflation Calculator

1656173280849.png
 
The actual Hawken or the Hawken-style?

There were rifles of this style used by Civil War Sharpshooters , especially early in the war. Were they actual Hawkens? I'm sure some were.

I'd say Jeremiah Johnson caused a resurgence in the modern Hawken repros.
 
I’ve used this calculator and it does go back to 1840. $25 in 1840 → 2022 | Inflation Calculator

View attachment 146375
That’s not a clear translation however. Money over centuries is very hard. Land was much cheaper then, and so were rents, food more expensive, as was clothing. However people tended to have much less clothing. Three shirts, a couple of trouser, One sunday go to meeting maybe. Stockings, waist coat coat and over coat, one or two hats and one winters cap.
Some cheap things were grossly expensive. Salt in Saint Louis sold for the same price as gun powder per pound.
A working man might expect thirty to forty dollars a month. A skilled journeyman would be in the five hundred per year
A beer in a tavern could come with a free lunch
So a Hawken cost the best part of what a carpenter, mason, cooper such could make in two to three weeks, a farm or construction labor that would be nearly a months wages
 
Pretty new to the world of muzzeloaders here. I would think a "Hawkin" style firearm would be a percussion (although I have read the Hawkin brothers did make some flinters) while a "Pennsylvania" or "Kentucky" rifle would be a flinter and not a percussion. Would I be correct in this assesment?
 
Actually, William W. Hawken and Christopher M. Hawken, went totally bankrupt in St. Louis in March of 1857, which was the business of the Hawken family throughout the "golden years" of what is called the "Hawken Rifle". Sam, at that time, had apparently taken off from gunsmithing but later on, worked with Gemmer.

There were many gunsmiths working the westward trade in Missouri along the Missouri River from which settlers outfitted for westward travel. St. louis was the home of many, but as opportunities opened up further upstream thanks to the steamboat, so did gunsmiths. Percussion firearms were touted as being able to "fire under water". So ...were civil war snipers armed with "Hawkens"? Not newly made ones from the Hawken shop. It was gone. Source - Missouri Gunsmiths To 1900 by Victor A. Paul
 
Back
Top