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Outstanding Hall Model 1819 Breech Loading Percussion Conversion Rifle

Currency:USD Category:Antiques / Firearms & Armory Start Price:1,300.00 USD Estimated At:3,250.00 - 4,750.00 USD
Outstanding Hall Model 1819 Breech Loading Percussion Conversion Rifle
This Hall Model 1819 Rifle was manufactured by the U.S. Arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, in 1834. The rifle was subsequently converted to percussion. The weapon has a rifled barrel with the first 11/2-inches bored smooth. The barrel has a block front sight that serves as a lug for a socket bayonet, an off-set open rear sight and is secured by three pin-fasted bands. The iron trigger guard has a prominent finger spur. The breechblock release spur is located on the underside of the stock ahead of the trigger guard. The hinged breechblock has been fitted with a percussion hammer with knurled spur. The integral flintlock flash pan on the breechblock has been filled and fitted with a percussion nipple. The rifle has a browned iron buttplate and is fitted with a bright-finished button head ramrod. The rifle breech is roll-stamped: "J.H. HALL/H. FERRY/U.S./1834" in four lines. The barrel, bands, receiver, trigger guard and buttplate have a deep brown lacquer finish, the hammer is casehardened and the breech block has traces of a niter blue finish. The stock is black walnut with an oil finish. The Hall rifle is significant as the first breech loading rifle adopted and produced in large quantities as a regulation military weapon and as one of the first firearms manufactured with completely interchangeable parts. Percussion conversion Hall Rifles were used by both Federal and Confederate troops during the first months of the Civil War.
BBL: 35 5/8 inch round
Stock: walnut
Gauge: 52 percussion
Finish: brown
Grips:
Serial Number: NSN
Condition: Excellent. The rifle retains 98% plus of the original brown lacquer finish on the barrel, bands, receiver, trigger guard and buttplate. The excellent breechblock was arsenal re-finished when the rifle was converted to percussion and has a bronze color on the top with traces of niter blue on the sides. The stock is in excellent condition with raised, feathered, grain and shows only light storage wear. The rifle appears to be un-issued and possibly un-fired. This is an outstanding example of a third production type Model 1819 Breech Loading rifle converted to percussion.