it's called a C&R license. Contact your Alcohol Tax & Firearms office nearest you
Depends on where you are, and the laws that govern that place. In MOST of the US, no license is required. However, in firearms, "antique" has a legally defined meaning. Firearms that use loose powder and ball are antiques regardless of age. Cartridge firearms made prior to 1899 are antiques. They are NOT firearms under Federal law- they are Antique Firearms, and in most ways, treated as if they were not guns.There IS a Federal Firearms License for Collectors- known as a C&R or an 03 Curio and Relics Collectors License. It is not required, but permits a collector to buy firearms from another state and have them shipped directly to them. It covers firearms that are 50 years old or older.
Flayderman's guide to antique American firearms
There are some antique firearms dealers found online. They feature antique guns for sale. Some of these firearms include, H. Aston Single-Shot Percussion Pistol, Smith and Wesson, Civil War Savage and Colt Lightning.
You need to define"firearms license". There is no license needed to own or to carry a firearm in AZ.
go to http://gunbroker.com/
Depends on where you fired, when, at what/who.
go to the library and read a book on antique firearms. such book usually tells you how to rate an antique firearm and what to look for...............
In the US, you apply for a business license and apply to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives for an 01 Federal Firearms License (Dealer's license).
The address of the Heritage Antique Firearms Preservation Foundation is: 3250 N Sheridan Rd, Tulsa, OK 74115-2310
Federal Firearms License
L. Richards was a maker of antique flintlock firearms, such as their No. 6 pistol. Unfortunately, they are fairly rare, and there is no public records database for MOST antique firearms. Sorry.
Federal Firearms License.