2354

BEAUTIFUL LITTLESTOWN SCHOOL RELIEF CARVED AND SIGNED FREDERICK SELL RIFLE.

Currency:USD Category:Antiques / Firearms & Armory Start Price:15,000.00 USD Estimated At:30,000.00 - 50,000.00 USD
BEAUTIFUL LITTLESTOWN SCHOOL RELIEF CARVED AND SIGNED FREDERICK SELL RIFLE.
NSN. 47-1/2" oct to round 54 Cal. smooth bbl signed in a brass bbl insert in script "Frederick Sell". Bbl is fastened to the stock with four pins, each of which is surrounded by a rectangular silver inlay. Finely engraved four piece brass patchbox is a work of art in both outline and engraving. Box features seven piercings, Kindig notes the most he had ever seen on a Sell rifle was ten. The outlines and the piercings flow in beautiful curves determined by the engraved C scrolls and other details. Frederick Sell was a maker of quality patchboxes of widely varied design. Patchbox release is expertly hidden in the engraving on the buttplate tang. This feature is identical to that found on Kindig's Frederick Sell Number 184, which he considered one of the grandest Kentucky rifles he had ever seen. Relief patchbox lid is also nicely engraved. This is a masterpiece of American art of the period. Very fine curly maple stock has the original finish and is beautifully striped throughout. Brass sideplate is nicely engraved and is characteristic of the "Littlestown School". Gun is profusely relief carved over the entire cheekpiece side of the butt, around the bbl tang, forward of the patchbox and behind the rear ramrod pipe. Butt carving is extremely well done with C scrolls and a six-petaled flower and is carved from the top to the bottom of the buttplate with a scalloped design. There is a very well done and attractive fore-stock molding running from the carving at the ramrod pipe forward, which starts and stops at each silver inlay, leaving a flat surface for each plate. This is a nice detail which very few gunsmiths used. Wrist features an unusual football shaped detail on each side formed by silver wire inlay. Hand-forged lock appears to be original flint with a replaced hammer. 2-1/2" brass nosecap is characteristic of Sell's work. Brass engraved toeplate inlay runs a full 9" from toe to trigger guard and is held in place by six screws. There is an interesting 1-1/2" brass engraved inlay on the top of the comb butting up against the buttplate. Kindig thought Frederick Sell to be one of the great masters of Kentucky Rifle making. Frederick Sell is recorded as a gunsmith in York, PA in 1807, and in 1816 he purchased property in Littlestown. Frederick Sell is noted for his nicely scrolled triggers with a pierced detail to the rear, as found on this gun. Kindig writes he studied twenty-four Frederick Sell guns of which only six were signed, and only four of these were signed on brass plates let into the top of the bbl. Frederick Sell generally signed only his finest rifles. Exhibition: 1971 York County, Pennsylvania Historical Society Exhibition. PROVENANCE: See The Kentucky Rifle, A True American Heritage in Pictures, 1967 & 1985, by KRA, p. 74; see Accouterments III, by Johnston, pp. 56-58. Collection of Dr. Douglas Sirkin. CONDITION: Trigger guard forward finial is bent slightly. The lock appears to be original flint. Ramrod possible replacement. Very small wood sliver missing along the bbl. 4-49934 RG38