We placed this here as we build Hawken Rifles
Page 1 of 1
We placed this here as we build Hawken Rifles
The Hawken rifle was a muzzle loading rifle built by the Hawken brothers, and used on the prairies and in the Rocky Mountains of the United States during the early frontier days. It has become synonymous with the "plains rifle", "the buffalo gun", and the fur "trapper's gun". Developed in the 1820s, it was eventually displaced by breechloaders (such as the Sharps rifle) and lever-action rifles which flourished after the Civil War.
The Hawken "plains rifle" was made by Jacob and Samuel Hawken, in their St. Louis MO shop, which they ran from 1815 to 1858. Their shop continued to operate and sell rifles bearing the "Hawken" name under later owners William S. Hawken, William L. Watt, and J. P. Gemmer, until Gemmer closed down the business and retired in 1915.
Samuel and Jacob were trained by their father as rifle smiths on the east coast. They moved west and opened a business in St. Louis at the beginning of the Rocky Mountain fur trade. The brothers' claim to fame is the "plains rifles" produced by their shop. They produced what their customers needed in the west, a quality gun, light enough to carry all the time, capable of knocking down big targets at long range. They called their guns "Rocky Mountain Rifles," reflecting their customers: fur trappers, traders and explorers.
The earliest known record of a Hawken rifle dates to 1823 when one was made for Willaim Henry Ashley. The Hawkens did not mass-produce their rifles but rather made each one by hand, one at a time. A number of famous men were said to have owned Hawken rifles, including Auguste Lacome, Hugh Glass, Jim Bridger (this rifle was on loan to GRRW for several years), the same was true for the Kit Carson Hawken, the famous Mormon body guard Orrin Porter Rockwell carried a Hawken, Joseph Meek, Jedediah Strong Smith, and Theodore Roosevelt were just a few that depended on this maker's guns.
A FEW OF THE MANY THAT CARRIED RIFLES BY HAWKEN & H.E. LEMAN
See the full article: http://grrw.ca.tripod.com/pages/grrw.ca.models.built%202016.2017.htm
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The North West Trade Gun
North West Trade Guns have poorly recorded records when compared to other guns and the numbers of production is just a guess because of this.
One of the most asked questions about the NW Trade Guns is the location of the barrel bands (wedding rings).
Similar topics
» Future CVA Hawken build
» Investarm Bridger Hawken build
» Traditions St. Louis Hawken Build
» Lets build an Investarms Gemmer Hawken - By Ethan Yazel
» Hall Breechloading Rifles
» Investarm Bridger Hawken build
» Traditions St. Louis Hawken Build
» Lets build an Investarms Gemmer Hawken - By Ethan Yazel
» Hall Breechloading Rifles
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum