Wednesday, April 24, 2013
SIMEON AND EVAN P WARD GUNSMITHS
Thursday, December 1, 2022
Joshua Good Gunsmith, Singer Sewing Machine Agent & Inventer
Joshua Johnson Good was born in Albemarle Virginia in 1834. He was the son of Jacob Good (1799-1881) and Lucy Wiggington (1799-1880). His grandfather was Felix Good SR of Hampshire County.
Joshua Johnson Good
In the 1850 census the Goods are living in Hampshire County, Joshua is 16 years old and his father Jacob's occupation is listed as a miller. In the 1860 census, Joshua is in Atchison, Kansas listed as a Gunsmith. He is listed as a gunsmith in the 1860 Atchison City Directory. In June 1863 there was a Joshua G Good listed on the registration for the draft in Butler Ohio. His occupation is gunsmith, so I presume the G is a misprint. In 1867 Joshua married Mary E Renaker in Harrison Kentucky. In the 1870 we find him & Mary, with two children in Cynthiana Kentucky. In this census he is listed as a Singer Sewing Machine Agent and Gunsmith. In the 1880 census, Joshua is listed as a Sewing Machine Agent.
Joshua was also an inventor and held several patents, including one for, safety fenders for locomotives, autographic register improvement, improvement for plows & a machine for folding strips of paper.
Joshua's wife Mary died in 1886, he died in 1900, both of them are interred at Battle Grove Cemetery in Cynthiana Kentucky.
So now the question, whom did he apprentice to and how many guns did he make here in Hampshire County, or in Kentucky?
The rifle pictured has a commode lid cap box on the cheek side, similar to a couple of Benjamin F Shane's rifles. Another candidate, is Evan P Ward. The Good family lived close to the Wards. J J Good had a son named Evans P Good, possibly named after Evan P Ward? How many guns did he make while living in Hampshire county? Finding a Hampshire county rifle made by Good would be difficult, he wasn't here more than eight years after he completed his training. There should be more guns existing while he lived in Kentucky, but we have not seen any.
We hope that more rifles by J J Good will surface and please send us photos if you have one , we would love to see it. Thanks to James Whisker for the use of his photo & all the help he has been to us. BMS
Update 7/20/2024 Recently discovered.
Joshua Good percussion rifle and signed J G. The lock is a repurposed flintlock lock. The rifle was always percussion.
Thanks to a descendant of Joshua for the use their portrait.
Thursday, October 13, 2022
HAMPSHIRE COUNTY GUNSMITHS 1750-1900
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Native American, Old Trapper Blanket Rifle
“ Native American” guns—barrels shortened & brass tacks and straps of rawhide wrapped and bound around the wrist and the barrel & forestock. Some of these are legit pieces of Native American or frontier usage. Some of these are present-day embellishments added to a plain-looking or abused antique muzzle-loading gun to enhance their appeal to the Native American artifact collector. Almost all of them are antique-manufactured arms.
It is a known fact that some Native Americans decorated their rifles with brass tacks, as many original old photos show. They also shortened their rifles as short rifles were much handier on horseback.
Here is a percussion rifle made in Hampshire County in the
mid-1800s. It has been shortened to an overall length of 30 inches, with a
rifled .40 cal. barrel reduced to 18 inches. Hampshire County Rifles in unaltered conditions
have barrels from 38 to 44 inches. The stock has been cut at the butt, and naturally, the forestock has been cut.
This rifle originally had a standard percussion lock but was converted to this back-action percussion lock. Why? Was that back-action lock the only one they had? Possibly at the same time, the barrel was cut at the breech. The front sight and front ramrod pipe are in their original location. The muzzle has the original decoration as seen on many old longrifles. One thing of note is that this rifle has been shot a lot in this current shortened configuration, as the loss of steel and pitting on the barrel breech indicate much use of early corrosive percussion caps. The rear sight would have been added after the barrel was shortened. That is possibly a later addition, as some historians claim Native Americans had little or no use of sights.
We pulled a tack to identify its period of manufacture. It
is a mid-1800s brass tack.
The crudely made grease hole still has remnants of patch grease. The stock is broken all the way through at the center of the lock mortise. It is stabilized by the side plate, metal trigger guard, and a recently added metal strap under the lock. The trigger guard was hammered out of a piece of metal. The trigger appears to be forged. The wood added in front of the lockplate, covering the void in the original lock mortise, resulting from installing the back-action lock, could be a modern repair.
Was this rifle used by Native Americans or even a blanket rifle carried by some old-time trapper? We will study this rifle more and get input from other American Long Rifle students before we conclude. One thing is for sure: this rifle has had years of hard use and abuse. When this little rifle left Hampshire County in the mid-1800s, it was a long, slender thing of beauty, proudly carried by one of our ancestors, similar to Evan P Ward rifle below.
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Folks may tire of the old adage, " If this gun could talk," so we changed it to " These guns do talk."
Hope you enjoyed this, John & Mark
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Native American, Old Trapper Blanket Rifle
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