“English Lock” Infantry Musket
Dateca. 1640-1660
OriginEngland
MediumBeech, iron and steel
DimensionsBarrel: 42 1/2" Lock: 8"
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1992-54
DescriptionEnglish-lock musket with oil-finished stock of English ash. Stock hardware includes a simple iron butt plate secured with four square-headed nails; a simple iron trigger guard 7.5 inches overall, with a spoon-shaped bow and spear-point finials; two sheet iron bands near the muzzle, one serving as a ramrod thimble and the other as a stock reinforcement at the muzzle-end. The 42.5 inch barrel is 1.5 inches thick at the remaining length. A 1637 English proof and view marks appear on the left top barrel flat, plus a maker's mark -- an IB surmounted by an unidentifiable animal likeness. The "English Lock" is 8 inches in length and bears no maker's mark.Label TextImproving on the earlier “snaphaunce” muskets by introducing a combined pan cover and steel (commonly called a frizzen), Britain’s first true flintlock muskets were vastly better than the matchlocks which were still in use. Peculiar to England, these distinctive locks have an “S” shaped cock, a “dog” safety catch which engages the tip of the cock’s tail and a “buffer” which prevents it from moving too far forward when fired. The English locks recovered by archaeologists in Williamsburg may be the remnants of muskets once kept at Middle Plantation’s magazine.
MarkingsLondon Gunmaker's Company "Proof" & "View" marks struck into breech, along with the maker's mark of "IB" surmounted by a rooster(?), within an oval cartouche.
ProvenanceEx collection; Harold L. Peterson and Lawrence V. Bowly
Exhibition(s)
Ca. 1745
ca.1710-20
ca.1746-1748
1780 to 1820
ca.1700-1750
ca. 1720
ca. 1765
1765-1775
Ca. 1770-1780
1798-1801
1700-1750
ca. 1825-1840