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  2. Thomas Ketland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Ketland

    Thomas Ketland Senior, was a highly successful Birmingham gun maker. He started his business around 1760 and expanded into the export market around 1790. He died in 1816. The business carried on until bankruptcy in 1821. The company manufactured flintlock pistols, becoming quite successful in its field. W. Ketland was Thomas Ketland Sr's eldest ...

  3. Flintlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flintlock

    The first proto-flintlock was the snaplock, which was probably invented shortly before 1517 and was inarguably in use by 1547. [2] Their cost and delicacy limited their use; for example around 1662, only one in six firearms used by the British royal army was a snaphaunce, the rest being matchlocks. [3]

  4. Duelling pistol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duelling_pistol

    Single shot, flintlock, rifled, .58 caliber, blued steel, Versailles, 1794–1797. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto. A duelling pistol is a type of pistol that was manufactured in matching pairs to be used in a duel, when duels were customary. Duelling pistols are often single-shot flintlock or percussion black-powder pistols which fire a lead ...

  5. Cookson repeater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookson_repeater

    The Cookson flintlock rifle, a lever-action breech-loading repeater, also known as the Cookson gun, is one of many similar designs to appear beginning in the 17th century. The Victoria & Albert Museum in London has a Cookson Gun, dating to 1690. [1] According to the museum, John Cookson made several repeating guns based on this system.

  6. Wogdon & Barton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wogdon_&_Barton

    Robert Wogdon produced flintlock firearms from the 1760s, and was particularly well known for his high quality duelling pistols. [2] The name Wogdon became synonymous with dueling, to the extent that duels in England were sometimes referred to as "a Wogdon affair". Wogdon had apprenticed to the Irish gunmaker Edward Norton in Lincolnshire.

  7. Flintlock mechanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flintlock_mechanism

    A flintlock pistol made by Ketland Sparks generated by a flintlock mechanism. The flintlock mechanism is a type of lock used on muskets, rifles, and pistols from the early 17th to the mid-19th century. It is commonly referred to as a "flintlock" (without the word mechanism). The term is also used for the weapons themselves as a whole, and not ...

  8. Joseph Manton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Manton

    Manton's weapons remain some of the most highly sought-after designs of the flintlock age and can fetch more at auction than Holland & Holland's shotguns. His workforce included James Purdey (who went on to found Purdey's), Thomas Boss, William Greener, Charles Lancaster and William Moore. These five established major gun firms. [9]

  9. James Purdey & Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Purdey_&_Sons

    James Purdey was born in Whitechapel in 1784, and apprenticed to his brother-in-law, Thomas Keck Hutchinson. After completing his training, he worked for both Joseph Manton and Rev. Alexander Forsyth, before establishing his own company in London, England, in 1814, locating his business on Princes Street, now Wardour Street, near Leicester Square.