Lot 63
S. Hawken Heavy Sporting Rifle
Sale 2030 - Arms, Armor and Militaria
Oct 23, 2024 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati

Estimate
$10,000 - $15,000
Lot Description
S. Hawken Heavy Sporting Rifle
Western Expansion
.48 caliber. 32.5" double-keyed octagonal barrel. NSN. Browned finish, brass furniture, pewter nose cap, German silver wedge escutcheons, maple half-stock with raised cheek rest. Single shot percussion muzzleloading rifle. Barrel marked S. HAWKEN ST. LOUIS. Externally unmarked, single screw percussion lock is unadorned and equipped with double-set triggers, marked T GIBBONS on the interior. Rifle of typical Hawken sporting form circa 1849 with long, double screw iron tang, double keyed half-stock with pewter nose cap, double finger rest brass triggerguard, brass butt plate and plain brass toe plate. Barrel mounted with a dovetailed buckhorn fixed rear sight that is likely an old replacement and a dovetailed German silver front sight blade. Heavy barrel measures 1.11" across the flats. Includes a wooden ramrod that is a more modern replacement. This rifle was previously part of the noted collection of St. Louis rifles of DeWitt R Pourie, as his item #O-1164 and includes his 6-18-68 dated collection note card on the rifle. Pourie was the co-author of Gateway Gunsmiths - A Survey of St. Louis, MO Gunmakers, Gunsmiths, Gun Dealers and Patentees 1764-1940 with Victor Paul.

No name is more synonymous with the rifles of the great plains and pre-Civil War western expansion than that of Hawken. Jacob Hawken moved to St. Louis from Hagerstown Maryland in 1818 and was followed by his younger brother Samuel in 1822. Jacob had learned the trade of gun making from his father Christian and also spent time working at the US Arsenal at Harpers Ferry. Initially the Hawken brothers appear to have focused more on traditional gunsmithing and repairs in St. Louis than firearms manufacturing. The earliest guns they produced would have certainly been flintlocks with percussion guns not becoming typical until the early 1830s. Early St. Louis Hawken-marked percussion rifles were brass mounted full-stock guns that followed the general form of the Pennsylvania style rifles they would have produced in Hagerstown.

Subsequently, the brothers introduced the prototypical "Plains Rifle", also referred to at times as the "Rocky Mountain" rifle. These were typically very sturdy iron mounted large bore percussion rifles with double-set triggers that ranged from .52 to .60 caliber. They utilized heavy octagonal barrels that were typically 30" to 40" in length, normally measured at least 1.125" across the barrel flats, were usually rifled with seven grooves and were typically retained by two iron keys. The guns regularly utilized commercial locks marked by their makers or retailers. Fixed sights of the buckhorn rear and Rocky Mountain blade front were typical as well. These rifles were so perfectly adapted to the life of the mid-19th century plains hunter and mountain man that their popularity inspired a number of local gunmakers to offer guns of the same general pattern. Variations of the Hawken theme were produced by such famous St. Louis makers as Albright, Beauvais, Dimick and Gemmer.
This lot is located in Cincinnati.
ex-DeWitt R. Pourie Collection
Condition Report
Good to near very good. Bore good, with strong rifling and moderate oxidation with some pitting. Barrel with some traces of old brown mixed with surface oxidation and discoloration, showing some light to moderate pitting in the breech and bolster area, and some lightly scattered pitting here and there. Tang with some vise marks. Lock with more moderate pitting on exterior surface remains mechanically functional. Brass furniture with a medium golden patina. Wood with some moderate wear and traces of finish, showing a repaired crack in the counterpane, a small piece of replaced wood on the opposite side of the tang and some minor loss along the front edge of the lock. Otherwise the stock shows scattered bumps, dings and mars from handling and use.

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