2450

Rare Silver Inlaid 13 Silver Stars on a Whitney 1808 Contract Musket

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military / Long Guns - Muskets Start Price:2,500.00 USD Estimated At:5,000.00 - 7,500.00 USD
Rare Silver Inlaid 13 Silver Stars on a Whitney 1808 Contract Musket
SOLD
7,250.00USD+ (1,160.00) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2016 Dec 10 @ 17:54UTC-8 : PST/AKDT
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An outstanding and extremely rare Whitney Contract 73 caliber Musket Highly ornate and engraved Whitney Musket believed produced by John Joseph Henry of Philadelphia Pennsylvania for the Whitney Contract of 1808 and 1812. 2,707 Whitney Contract Muskets were produced initially by Henry with an unknown portion of muskets produced by him well into 1815. This arm has a ‘JN’ cartouche inspector’s mark on the left side of the breach stamped into the stock. It is the Arms Inspector’s Mark of John Nicholson Jr., arms inspector from 1799-1807. Although it is impossible to say exactly when, where and how an arm came into existence, this fabulous Ornate Musket fits right in with the time, date and place of where muskets and silver inlaid Pennsylvania rifles were being produced and decorated with silver. Although most Whitney Contract muskets are of 69 caliber, this fabulous piece MICs out at 73 caliber plus. This rifle is an art of American gun making of the American Revolutionary War as well as The War of 1812. Adorning 13 inlaid SILVER STARS is not a coincidence. It was to symbolize the 13 colonies and the Independence of America as a Sovereign Nation. The Silver Eagle on top of the Silver World would most likely have denoted the independence of American Merchant vessels that were being boarded by both French and English Navy’s and being commandeered without respect for American independence and severance during the time period after the Revolutionary War and leading to The War Of 1812. It is possible, because of the decorations and the caliber and that the cartouche is not in a circle and appears to have been burned into the stock as opposed to stamped, that this is the first Musket of the series. More research is needed to verify this beautiful museum piece’s history. State: City: Date: FHWAC#: 42746