the photos below are of another puzzle; the gun has a Manton carbine lock but is definitely not a Manton Carbine. It has a bore of .608 at the muzzle and is smoothbore. The barrel has British proofs on it and the bayonet in the photo does fit the gun and but also fits a percussion Enfield. There are no military stamps on the gun. 5000 Manton carbines were made but 10,000 locks were made, presumably a spare lock for every gun or alternately Manton was anticipating a second order for the carbines. I don't think the carbines were ever issued and my best guess is that the extra locks must have been sold as surplus not long after 1835. In the context that the pattern of 1839 Enfields were percussion and I think were general issue, my best guess is that the gun in the photo must have been made not long after 1835 and my guess would be for a private militia, which I think existed in England until the 1860s
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