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YellowCanary

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Hello all,

Brand new member here. First post.

I registered on this forum to see if anyone here could tell me a little about these 2 old rifles my family has had. Passed down and no information about them maintained. I’d love to know the history of them, and if I could restore them to a functional state. As in, would you recommend attempting it?

Thanks in advance.

I have a budding interest in muzzleloaders, mostly Kentucky style rifles due to the colonial/revolutionary war history.

That, and I was a Marine artillery officer. I guess those were technically breech loaders. . .but similar concept!
 

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Probably not restorable for much shooting and there is always the chance of botching the job unless a very skilled restorer does it. Good advise about finding a lock to replacing the missing one. I really like the back action Leman rifle. My ancestors rifle is a back action half stock 40 caliber without any markings on it. Here's a photo of it you can compare to yours.
 

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Gentlemen,

These responses are immensely helpful. Thanks for the information so far. I’m going to find a local gunsmith for further evaluation.
 
Get involved in the hobby and restore and shoot them. I have a back action Golcher lock 50 cal. Smoothbore that my father found while exploring some new property and buildings mid 1950’s. Broken stock, no drum, no trigger guard. Cleaned up leaned on our fireplace for 45 years until I restocked the barrel and lock, installed a new English breech plug, trigger and trigger guard. Will admit, first couple of shots the rifle was strapped to a table. 23 years later, still shooting it. Unless there are visible cracks in the barrel, breech, or a worn drum/nipple hole. Barrel bore condition may be a concern, but I’ve seen plenty of rifles with less than perfect bores doing OK at the range. Being involved with the sport and other Black Powder enthusiasts will give you direction to follow with these beauties.
 
And I should also ask: the guns are in Fort Worth. Does anyone have a recommendation for someone in the area?

You are not looking for the modern gunsmith that works on AR's and 1911's, you are looking for a specialist that only does work on muzzleloading rifles.

Look for someone who has the ability (and has) to make a muzzleloading rifle, that is the person you need if you want them restored correctly. If you can not find him, leave them alone until you can.

There are plenty of them around, you just have to start traveling in their circles, Friendship national matches and other places where they congregate,
 
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