Re: Dimick Target Rifles- information/pictures needed
Hallo!
Just to split a few historical hairs... ;) :) :)
Jacob Hawken had died in the St. Louis cholera epidemic of the spring of 1848.
Samuel went into semi-retirement in 1855. Son William and Tristam Campbell ran it for him.
Samuel sold the business to son William Hawken in 1858.
William sold the business to William Watt and William Bennett in 1860.
J.P. Gemmer buys the business from Watt & partners in 1865. Gemmer tries to keep things going after the Civil War, and plays with merging surplus breechloaders into the Hawken rifle such as Spencer or Trapdoor until the new generation of high powdered cartridges came out.
As with Dimick, they employed a number of gunmakers, so rifles made in the Hawken shop varied widely in construction details as they made guns to customer order, so while they have a "brand" it is not the "classic" 1850's Samuel Hawken half stock that became the Hobby's standard conception of a "Hawken Rifle" until very late. Even Sam like to fiddle. For example, he liked Tennesee style cheek pieces when using the classic Hawken beaver tail form.
Granted, starting in the 1850's there is far less deviation from the theme as there had been previously as a somewhat "set pattern" evolved due to the adoption of cast parts and commercial parts where previously they had been hand-made or in house/local. So, having to build guns to more standardized parts, their gunmakers could only fiddle slightly with decoration like engraving, inlays, patchboxes, or how they shaped the cheek pieces.
Hobby-wise...
In brief, and to over generalize.... there are four basic streams for "Hawkens."
The first is the commercial Thompson-Center "Hawken" half stock which is not very S. Hawken-like other than it is.. a half stock. That was replicated in severa froms by the Italians. (Sometimes knicknamed "Hawkin" or "Hawkins" rifles because they are not much like Hawken rifles.)
The second is based on the commercial Bud Brown/Cherry Corners late S. Hawken half stock that evolved through Ithaca, then Navy Arms, then an Uberti version offered to American businesses known as the "Santa Fe Hawken," and is still basically around made/sold by Pedersoli.
The third is a parts/component set (aka "kit") version of Kit Carson's and Jim Bridger's Hawken half stocks sold by TRACK OF THE WOLF.
The fourth is custom-built J. & S. Hawken full stocks, or S. Hawken half stocks.
Herr John's advice on Ohio Rifles is an excellent alternative, especially if one is willing to restore one from its antique/relic condition to its CW appearance, or find one "good enough" to be used as is.
Ohio Rifles can be deer rifles or target rifles in half or full stock. As a result, some of the "deer rifles" can have smallish bores in the .30-.40 range. While the target rifles can be in the .40-.45 range but may have heavy "bench" type target barrels (granted heavy "sharpshooter" rifles weighing as much as thirty-some pounds were occassionally used for special purpose shooting, they are not NUG the kind of weapons used by "active" sharpshooters/skirmishers and were relegated to the wagons until needed for special work.
Looking at the prices of the so-so Lyman GPR these daze, IMHO unless one finds a used one at a low price, those dollars would go farther with an Ohio Rifle. The defunct Golden Age Arms used to offer Vincent rifles, and now TRACK OF THE WOLF offers component/parts ("kits.")
Curt
Hallo!
Just to split a few historical hairs... ;) :) :)
Jacob Hawken had died in the St. Louis cholera epidemic of the spring of 1848.
Samuel went into semi-retirement in 1855. Son William and Tristam Campbell ran it for him.
Samuel sold the business to son William Hawken in 1858.
William sold the business to William Watt and William Bennett in 1860.
J.P. Gemmer buys the business from Watt & partners in 1865. Gemmer tries to keep things going after the Civil War, and plays with merging surplus breechloaders into the Hawken rifle such as Spencer or Trapdoor until the new generation of high powdered cartridges came out.
As with Dimick, they employed a number of gunmakers, so rifles made in the Hawken shop varied widely in construction details as they made guns to customer order, so while they have a "brand" it is not the "classic" 1850's Samuel Hawken half stock that became the Hobby's standard conception of a "Hawken Rifle" until very late. Even Sam like to fiddle. For example, he liked Tennesee style cheek pieces when using the classic Hawken beaver tail form.
Granted, starting in the 1850's there is far less deviation from the theme as there had been previously as a somewhat "set pattern" evolved due to the adoption of cast parts and commercial parts where previously they had been hand-made or in house/local. So, having to build guns to more standardized parts, their gunmakers could only fiddle slightly with decoration like engraving, inlays, patchboxes, or how they shaped the cheek pieces.
Hobby-wise...
In brief, and to over generalize.... there are four basic streams for "Hawkens."
The first is the commercial Thompson-Center "Hawken" half stock which is not very S. Hawken-like other than it is.. a half stock. That was replicated in severa froms by the Italians. (Sometimes knicknamed "Hawkin" or "Hawkins" rifles because they are not much like Hawken rifles.)
The second is based on the commercial Bud Brown/Cherry Corners late S. Hawken half stock that evolved through Ithaca, then Navy Arms, then an Uberti version offered to American businesses known as the "Santa Fe Hawken," and is still basically around made/sold by Pedersoli.
The third is a parts/component set (aka "kit") version of Kit Carson's and Jim Bridger's Hawken half stocks sold by TRACK OF THE WOLF.
The fourth is custom-built J. & S. Hawken full stocks, or S. Hawken half stocks.
Herr John's advice on Ohio Rifles is an excellent alternative, especially if one is willing to restore one from its antique/relic condition to its CW appearance, or find one "good enough" to be used as is.
Ohio Rifles can be deer rifles or target rifles in half or full stock. As a result, some of the "deer rifles" can have smallish bores in the .30-.40 range. While the target rifles can be in the .40-.45 range but may have heavy "bench" type target barrels (granted heavy "sharpshooter" rifles weighing as much as thirty-some pounds were occassionally used for special purpose shooting, they are not NUG the kind of weapons used by "active" sharpshooters/skirmishers and were relegated to the wagons until needed for special work.
Looking at the prices of the so-so Lyman GPR these daze, IMHO unless one finds a used one at a low price, those dollars would go farther with an Ohio Rifle. The defunct Golden Age Arms used to offer Vincent rifles, and now TRACK OF THE WOLF offers component/parts ("kits.")
Curt
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