Categories
All About Guns

An European Flobert with a 9.25″ barrel, Single Shot Gallery Target Pistol in caliber .22 Short

Categories
Being a Stranger in a very Strange Land Other Stuff Some Scary thoughts This great Nation & Its People

I need some serious thought from the smart folks out there

https://m.ok.ru/video/1420753898182

To my Wonderful Readers out there,

                                                                  I have just watched one of my all time favorite pictures (Lillies of the Fields with Sidney Poitier) and something struck me pretty hard.
In that I noticed something that has been bothering me a lot lately. But I just could not quite put my finger on it. Then like a bolt of lightening it hit me. In that the world that I was watching was so vastly different from the one we live in.
The big thing was that their world inspite of the racism etc. etc. seemed to be a world of hope, respect and a sense of what it use to be to be an American.
Now I know that I am an old man of 66 plus years. That & I know that the old will always say things were better in their day. (We been doing that since Cain & Abel. & But I can still remember the 60’s & the 70’s.)
That and my pain pills are on strike right now. As Spinal stenosis is a real joy that I would not wish on my worst enemy. Sorry about the moaning & complaining.
But when did we become so untrusting of our fellow man? Why is that it seems that for want of a better word has our world become so brutal and ugly?  Why this race to the bottom of the pit of crassness and fake ? Why does it also seem that there is so little real beauty left anymore in our culture ? (Like our women trying their best to get ugly? Tatts etc etc.) The bottom line being as to how has this come about?
If anybody has some brillant observations about this and what we can do about this. I would really be grateful to hear it.
 Anyways I am going to look at pictures of my wonderful grandkids and be thankful for my wonderful wife that God has given to his most unworthy servant.
Thanks
Grumpy
PS  Please no the Jews, Blacks etc etc. are the cause. As I know quite a few of these folks and they are not happy about this either.
Categories
Another potential ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE You have to be kidding, right!?!

Thank God that she is not my mayor

Categories
All About Guns

A Winchester 75 sporter in caliber 22LR

Categories
One Hell of a Good Fight

Bohun vs Wołodyjowski – Sabre duel

Categories
All About Guns

You Shouldn’t Trust These Pistols..and Why?

Categories
All About Guns

Best Guns You Should Carry At Church

https://youtu.be/rORBNIEVFkg

Categories
All About Guns

GALIL ACE vs CZ BREN 2

Categories
All About Guns This great Nation & Its People War

Stolen fron Chant du Depart (A Great Blog BTW!!)

The first musket “from the Schindel farm in Hagerstown.”

Source: all photos related to this gun are by the author.
A seller had a somewhat disreputable, beat up old musket for sale at a very low price at a large antique arms show. (Yes, there are such things!). It was a conglomeration of various parts and pieces from long before the Civil War. But, the seller’s tag read:
Someone making up a story would be much more likely to attach the name of a famous battle location, and rebel stuff usually gets higher prices, so this had a ring of truth unlike so many old stories.
The old saying is “Buy the gun, not the story.” It was NOT a “German shotgun.” This is what the gun whispered to me:\
It was made from salvaged Revolutionary War musket parts, probably circa 1790-1812. Poor quality, it would have been used as a general purpose gun in the early days, and was marginally able to meet the requirements of the Militia Act of 1792 which required every man to have a musket for militia duty.
  • French Model 1763 (+/-) “Charleville” musket lock marked “Maubeuge Manuf. Rle.”
  • Barrel may be from the same type, but cut down to about 36”.
  • Stock is probably American maple, having almost the form of a rifle stock.
  • Trigger guard and lower ramrod pipe are from a British Brown Bess and possibly the buttplate.
This is very close to some arms made by Rufus Perkins in Bridgewater, Massachusetts circa 1808-1812, including some Indian trade guns. At some point the stock was painted red, now worn thin, common on guns intended for trade with the Indians, but Bubba may have painted it to match his barn.
This gun may have been carried by New England militiamen to the mid-Atlantic states during the War of 1812. Or maybe the owner migrated and took it with him. Eventually it was converted to percussion, probably circa 1830-1850 and a few such guns were still used to a limited extent by militia units raised during the Civil War.
Later it was altered to a half-stock for hunting or hog butchering, perhaps before, or after the Civil War. It was certainly plausible that it was in the Hagerstown, MD area in 1862.
“The Schindel farm” location was undoubtedly one of several owed by members of that family about 6 miles southeast of Hagerstown, or about 8 miles northeast of the Antietam battlefield, according to old property maps and census records.
My guess is that this story has some truth to it, and that either the soldier was a militia man who had this gun, or deserted his unit and found this gun on a farm and used it to disable himself as his unit headed towards the battle. Or, maybe he was a draft dodger who mutilated himself “by accident” several months before the battle of Antietam. We will never know, but war is not always gallantry in battle with mild flesh wounds. PTSD was every bit as real then as today.
Second musket- “The Cool Creek musket.”
In researching Antietam farms, I stumbled across a delightful blog by a Washington, DC interior designer and his husband who discovered a [once] nice brick federal farmhouse circa 1823 with 7 acres right on Antietam creek, between Hagerstown and Sharpsburg. They proceeded to purchase and considerably upgrade the house to be really beautiful. When nearly complete, they invited the family of some former owners over to see the results, and were surprised with a delightful gift.
“Grateful for allowing them to tour the house and grounds, they brought us an extraordinary gift. A German rifle made for the Napoleonic war around 1815 was found in the ground near the smoke house. At the dawn of the Civil War, the south found itself with a lack of weapons, most factories being in the north. European countries sold their old weaponry to the Confederate government where they subsequently fashioned them to weapons for their soldiers.
The “Cool Hollow Musket” as it is called was one of these such weapons. Most likely left by a Confederate soldier that either stayed near the house or was treated there. Whatever the actual story is we will never know, but this wonderful treasure was an amazing gift that has come home.
 
What we have come to realize is that our historic home, just like so many others is more than just the built environment. These structures encompass centuries of family life, both happy times and sad, war and peace. In this bloggers humble opinion, these are the most important aspects of owning an old house, we are keepers of the past, saving it for the future.” Source (Quote and image)
This musket is indeed a German (actually proto-German Prussian) model 1809 flintlock converted to percussion and widely used by both sides in the Civil War. This one had both the barrel and stock shortened, likely done after leaving military service, but still useful as a “farm gun.” I highly recommend the story of their preservation and restoration work, but it is only available on the Wayback Machine, which tends to be cranky and you need to be persistent and creative in finding all the installments. You can start here.
Now, it is an amazing coincidence that by 1861, the “Cool Hollow House” was amalgamated with other properties into a 500 acre estate “owned by David and Magdalene Schindel.” Mr. Schindel was a prominent businessmen in and around Hagerstown, MD. Mrs. Schindel, the daughter of the builder, Benjamin Emmertt.” Armies moved across this land twice, both in the September 1862 advance to Antietam, and again around July 9, 1863 after Gettysburg as union forced followed the retreating Confederates. Yes, this is in the region of Schindel farms mentioned previously. Source
Undoubtedly many other old guns have been found adjacent to battlefields, or the line or march to or from a scene of combat. “I wish it could talk.” Or, maybe there are scenes best left unseen, such as these dead at the Dunker Church at Antietam, only a tiny number of the 23,000 killed wounded or captured that day. Source:
(Source)
Categories
Well I thought it was funny! You have to be kidding, right!?!

I would of never guessed this about Penguins