Lot Essay
Only three guns of this type by Cookson are so far recorded, the other two being in the Victoria and Albert Museum (No. 77 - 1893), and the Milwaukee Museum, Wisconsin (No. N.6316). The present gun is the most highly worked of the three
It is not known where Cookson worked, although Major H.B.C. Pollard mentions an example signed 'John Cookson fecit Londini 1666', without quoting his source (A History of Firearms, p. 71).
The John Cookson who is recorded as living in Boston, Massachusetts between 1701 and 1762, and who advertised similar guns for sale, is widely assumed to have been the son of the maker of the present gun.
Although the breech-loading magazine system employed is usually termed the 'Lorenzoni System' after the Florentine gunmaker Michele Lorenzoni, it is not certain to which European gunmaker the credit for its invention should be given. A much quoted reference to the system in the diaries of Samuel Pepys dates back to 1662. On 3 July he refers to 'a gun to discharge seven times, the best of all devices I ever saw, and very servicable, and not a bauble; for it is much approved of, and many made thereof'. Despite this eulogy the incidence of explosion in the powder magazines probably explains the great rarity of such firearms today
It is not known where Cookson worked, although Major H.B.C. Pollard mentions an example signed 'John Cookson fecit Londini 1666', without quoting his source (A History of Firearms, p. 71).
The John Cookson who is recorded as living in Boston, Massachusetts between 1701 and 1762, and who advertised similar guns for sale, is widely assumed to have been the son of the maker of the present gun.
Although the breech-loading magazine system employed is usually termed the 'Lorenzoni System' after the Florentine gunmaker Michele Lorenzoni, it is not certain to which European gunmaker the credit for its invention should be given. A much quoted reference to the system in the diaries of Samuel Pepys dates back to 1662. On 3 July he refers to 'a gun to discharge seven times, the best of all devices I ever saw, and very servicable, and not a bauble; for it is much approved of, and many made thereof'. Despite this eulogy the incidence of explosion in the powder magazines probably explains the great rarity of such firearms today