Kentucky Gunmakers Two-Volume Set

$149.95

Kentucky Gunmakers of the Muzzle Loading Era 1775-1900 is a two-volume hard-cover set published by Shelby Gallien in 2012. Volume 1 – Gunmaking History is an illustrated narrative of Kentucky gunmaking and how its primary schools evolved. Volume 2 – Biographies contains over 1,100 biographies of early Kentucky gunsmiths. Sold as a set only.

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About the Kentucky Gunmakers Two-Volume Set
Kentucky Gunmakers of the Muzzle Loading Era 1775-1900
is a substantial two-volume hard-cover set that is the most comprehensive work on early Kentucky rifles and related firearms. The large-format 9x12 pages are printed on premium 105 lb. coated paper with a matte finish. This set features high-quality hard-cover bindery and book covers with attractive dust jackets. This work is a thorough study that documents the gunmakers who shaped Kentucky’s gunmaking traditions and the attractive southern-style guns they made. Many never-before seen rifles are illustrated as the story of Kentucky’s gunmaking is told, from Kentucky’s earliest gunmakers to its last holdouts who clung to the ‘old ways’ in the state’s southeastern hill county area.

Volume 1 – Gunmaking History is 289 pages. It’s an illustrated narrative that begins with the first pioneer gunsmiths to walk on Kentucky soil. The state’s early rifles were utilitarian ‘working guns.’ During Kentucky’s ‘golden age’ of gunmaking around 1800, seven primary schools of gunmaking are identified and revealed. The percussion era from 1835 to 1900 saw the gunmaking industry blossom as Kentucky sold thousands of rifles to settlers heading west during the great western expansion. Superb target rifles appeared during the percussion era, with Benjamin Mills’ rifles being among the best not only in Kentucky, but in the nation.

Volume 2 – Biographies is 322 pages. It contains over 1,100 biographies of Kentucky gunsmiths during the muzzle loading era. Kentucky’s most notable gunmakers and their training are documented, along with the familial migration patterns that help explain the final styles found in Kentucky’s major gunmaking schools. Readers will learn about the Bryan and West families of Lexington, Jacob Rizer and David Weller of Bardstown, Moses Dickson and Joseph Griffith of Louisville, Benjamin Mills of Harrodsburg, John Shell and Pleasant Wilson of the southeastern hill county, and others whose-high quality work is sought after.

For years, Kentucky’s gunmaking was often overlooked by collectors and researchers due to the assumption that its guns were merely lesser quality ‘mountain rifles’ or ‘hog rifles.’ Kentucky’s higher quality firearms were often attributed to southwestern Virginia. Thanks to the research in this publication, many misidentified early rifles have now been correctly identified as Kentucky products. This comprehensive work has helped Kentucky take its rightful place among the states where early gunmaking was revered for not only its artistry, but also for its social and economic impacts.