A VERY RARE 20-BORE FERGUSON-ACTION BREECH-LOADING FLINTLOCK PARK RIFLE

Details
A VERY RARE 20-BORE FERGUSON-ACTION BREECH-LOADING FLINTLOCK PARK RIFLE

BY DURS EGG, LONDON, CIRCA 1790
With browned sighted barrel cut with eight shallow grooves and with silver fore-sight, the breech signed on the sighting flat and engraved with a band of beadwork behind the loading aperture, case-hardened tang engraved with a martial trophy and a floral spray, signed border engraved case-hardened bevelled lock with stepped tail and semi-rainproof pan, figured walnut half-stock (chipped and repaired) without fore-end cap, the butt with cheek-piece and characteristic chequering on the grip, blued iron mounts engraved with martial trophies, and traces of original finish (retaining extension missing from trigger-guard), London proof marks
30in. barrel
Provenance
Pitchford Hall, Shropshire
Literature

Lot Essay

Captain Patrick Ferguson patented his improved version of the La Chaumette breech-loading system in 1776. He employed the quick thread on the breech plug which enabled it to be opened by one turn of the trigger-guard (already used by Bidet in London in the 1720's), but he improved the action to prevent jamming after a few rounds by cutting a smooth recess into the plug where it formed the breech end of the barrel, and a number of vertical grooves across the screw threads. The present rifle incorporates the first, but not the second improvement

Ferguson demonstrated his rifle most successfully to the Board of Ordnance and to the King, whom he told that he could fire seven shots in a minute although "he would not undertake in that time to knock down above five of his Majesty's enemies". One hundred rifles were specially made (of which only one is known to survive), and a company of Riflemen trained to use them. They fought with distinction under Ferguson in the American War of Independence at the battle of Brandywine Creek in 1777, but Ferguson was severly wounded and the project abandoned. He returned to the field in 1778 and was killed at the Battle of King's Mountain on October 7, 1780. Durs Egg, who made Ferguson's own rifles, produced some fine sporting rifles, the most distinguished of which, silver-mounted and gold-inlaid, bears the crest of the Prince of Wales and is hallmarked for 1782. It is preserved at Winsor Castle (No. L.420)

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