Are those Jaegers?
Or 1/2 stock ______?
Edit: answered my questions before I finished reading response threads.
1840ish fur trade?? Flintlocks??? By the 1820's(?) cap locks were more predominantly used unlike during the early to late 1700's/turn of the century; for various obvious reasons. The last of the westward expansion had started.
Curious as that would be nearing the end of the fur trade and more curious as to 1/2 stocks being trade guns, since most trade guns were full length stocks,....and of questionable barrel straightness.
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"Smell that! That's the smell of black powder. I love the smell of black powder in the morning. "
Flintlocks were well used during the civil war and many years after.
As far as the fur trade is concerned, during the rendezvous period of 1825-1840, the first listing of percussion caps in the inventories of goods brought to rendezvous was in the Invoice of Sundry Merchandise from the Rocky Mountain Outfit 1836 under charge of Fontenelle, Fitzpatrick, & Co. They brought 10 Hawkin Rifles and 10 boxes of percussion caps. Compare that to over 100 Northwest Guns, dozens of "gun locks" (
certainly replacement locks for the most common gun in use during this time period, the Northwest Gun). They also brought two thousand gun flints (
for smoothbore flintlocks) and five hundred rifle flints (
for rifled flintlocks).
I think it can safely be said that a Hawkin came out with one of the members of the Rendezvous caravan in 1835. That was likely the first percussion gun in the Rocky Mountains. Ten of the mountain men (
certainly free trappers, not company men) were impressed enough to order one for the following year's Rendezvous in 1836.
The next year, 1837, in the Invoice of Sundry Merchandise from the Rocky Mountain Outfit 1837 under charge of Fontenelle, Fitzpatrick, & Co. is listed two thousand gun flints and three thousand rifle flints. Thirty six Northwest Guns of "the finest quality" at $4.50 each (
this went too Indians who were upset about the quality of Northwest Guns they had received the previous year), five American Rifles at $19 each (
a competitor of Hawkin), ten Hawkins at $24 each (
over five times the cost of "the finest quality" Northwest gun), and twelve additional Northwest Guns (
for the mountain men or trade with the Indians we do not know).
The last Rendezvous was in 1840. Most mountain men left the fur trade business before 1841. A few stayed on till 1845 but by that time Silk from China had replaced Beaver in the finest hats in Europe and America. Beaver no longer "shined". This last group of mountain men switched to guiding wagon trains West, this was the beginning of the final westward expansion- settlers.