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Outstanding New England flintlock fowler dated 1769 and pictured on page 41 in Tom Grinslade’s maste

Currency:USD Category:Antiques / Firearms & Armory Start Price:2,000.00 USD Estimated At:4,000.00 - 8,000.00 USD
Outstanding New England flintlock fowler dated 1769 and pictured on page 41 in Tom Grinslade’s maste
All items are as is, no warranty or claims and All SALES ARE FINAL. Please examine prior to bidding as it is the bidder's responsibilty to establish condition, age, genuineness, value or any other determinative factors.
Outstanding New England flintlock fowler dated 1769 and pictured on page 41 in Tom Grinslade’s masterful work, “Flintlock Fowlers: The First Guns Made in America, American Fowling Pieces from 1700-1820”. The longarm is approx. 58-1/2” overall with a 43” barrel, approx. 20 gauge bore, heavy dark patina on barrel and lockplate that is marked “Ketland & Co.”; full length wood stock with flared iron ramrod retained by brass ferrules and beautifully ornamented brass furniture that is best described by quoting Mr. Grinslade “. . . inlays on this fowler are unusual and include three watch gears inlaid into the stock, indicating that this gunsmith might also have been a clock maker. On the butt plate tang is the date 1769 and a folk-art caricature of a hunter with a cone-shaped hat and holding a fowler. Engraved on the silver escutcheon is a gun with a bayonet and two crossed swords accented by square-headed brass nails around the oval. The bow of the trigger guard has unique scalloped edges with a rear finial formed into a bird’s beak shape. On the walnut stock at the barrel tang, the maker carved a small shell pattern. The unmarked barrel is an octagonal section for the first ten inches changing to round at a molded band”: a superb early American fowler with great artwork on the brass mountings; suitable for the finest collection or display in any museum. Est.: $4,000-$8,000.