Hello. I have a TRS Baker rifle kit I am working on. This may be a long shot, but does anyone know the look/dimensions/specs of a proper sling for this rifle? Been looking at British Muzzleloaders on Utube, which has great info on the Baker, but no mention of sling description. If anyone makes these, may I get a reference? Or, if anyone has specs, and can provide, I can make one. Thanks much. If you have pictures, that would be great.
Hi Frod,
Your question piqued my interest as I've made different styles of Brown Bess slings and US slings up through the UnCivil War. However, I never had a bespoke work request for a Baker sling. At first, I thought it might be in the style of a Brown Bess sling, but it appears a bit different.
After looking around a bit, I found this one, that seems to have been an original. I must confess the end with the sewn on smaller piece of leather confused me a bit. Normally the leather lace on English Slings was a separate piece of leather and not sewn onto the end. I have no idea if the leather button is original or something added in the field or later on. The description gives lengths, BUT I'm not sure if I would go off this one sling alone.
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Below are a couple of period paintings I find very interesting:
Here's a picture of a modern reenactor. You may notice his sling does not seem to have the length of the ones from the original drawings. It appears to not be long enough to actually sling the rifle on one's shoulder as do the ones in the paintings above. It also appears to have a "slide" or "loop" or "sliding loop" over the forward part of the mounted sling that has slipped down next to the buckle.
The official depository of Richard Moore's articles on the 95th Rifles. Freely available for you to digest at your leisure.
www.95thrifles.com
OK some basic information on period British slings. The Tower issued what they called "plain tann'd" or "blacken'd" leather goods with British Military Land Service Arms. Now IF the Colonels of the Regiments wished to have "buff" slings to be whitened by pipe clay, then they had to pay for them out of the funds given to them by the government to equip and uniform their men OR they paid for the added expense out of their own pockets. Since the 95th seems to have stuck with "blacken'd" leather goods for their uniforms, I personally would not use a pipe clay whitened buff sling nor one made of white leather.
More coming, but I don't want to lose this info, so I'll post it now.
Gus