You will need a professional appraisal
If you mean the scene where he shoots the rope on the ferry, that is not a flintlock. It is a Sharps 1865 rifle fitted with a full length J. Stevens brass tube target scope.
No such thing. The last flintlock rifle of the US Military was the Springfield Model 1840. You need a hands on appraisal by a dealer in muzzleloaders.
flintlock rifle
Nothing different from a rifle.
There is no such thing as a Flintlock rifle. There is a rifle and a flintlock. A rifle is a weapon with rifling in the barrel which are curved notches wich cause the bullet to spin as it travels down the barrel. A flintlock is a weapon with no rifling and shoots a spherical ball. It is propelled down the barrel by an explosion caused by a flint stiking a metal plate. The sparks then ignite some gunpowder shooting the shot from the barrel. A flintlock was not a brilliant weapon, they weren't that powerful, they had a poor range and they sometimes misfired.
No such thing. The last flintlock rifle of the US military was the Springfield Model 1840. You need a hands on appraisal by a dealer in muzzleloaders.
No such thing. The last flintlock rifle of the US military was the Springfield Model 1840. You need a hands on appraisal by a dealer in muzzleloaders.
rifle flintlock
The most famous flintlock pistol is arguably the "Kentucky Long Rifle," often associated with American history and frontier life. However, in terms of specific models, the "Baker Rifle" and the "Pistol of the Duke of Wellington" are well-known examples. The Baker Rifle, while primarily a rifle, had a notable pistol variant used in the Napoleonic Wars. Collectively, these weapons represent significant advancements in firearm technology during the flintlock era.
Varies. European Jager rifles were shorter, and fired larger bullets. The Pennsylvania rifle (miscalled the Kentucky rifle) were of smaller caliber, but longer- about 5 feet.
100-300 USD
One mile