Interesting fore-end evolution

Londonshooter

CGN frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
62   0   0
Location
SW Ontario
Perhaps others want to contribute either interesting shapes, attachments, or release mechanisms?
These three are examples of fore-ends permanently attached to the action.
1) a Thullier from France
xd2tMI0.jpg

2) Daw from London
pEHphf9.jpg

and 3) Masu, London but possibly origins in Belgium
FrzJhZt.jpg
 
I need to take some more photos but basically all three would look the same as the first image if I presented them the same way.. The wedge and escutcheon for # 2 and 3 attach the barrels to the fore-end, but the fore-end remains attached to the action flats after the barrels are removed if that makes sense.
 
Screenshot_2022-02-14-17-11-50.jpg

Not in your league but ive always found this style unique. But i like case colors. I cant ever recall how to spell it but it is a joy watching others try to figure out how to hold it while shooting
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_2022-02-14-17-11-50.jpg
    Screenshot_2022-02-14-17-11-50.jpg
    26.7 KB · Views: 268
Great subject. Ooooh, I'll play!

To add to Londonshooter's articulated-but-fixed fore-ends, here is another Gustave Masu:

i0BuDRj.jpg


And a gun signed Robert Marrison of Norwich, with a Belgian copy of a Beatus Beringer action made by Jean Louis Mathieu Godin of Herstal, Belgium:

qhjo5FY.jpg

Tb6U2c4.jpg


Then there is the immoveable fore-end of the Bastin action, from the Bastin Brothers of Hermalle-sous-Argenteau, Liège, on another gun from Gustave Masu:

7UYxwCQ.jpg


Contrasted with a superficially similar but wholly different action, by Maximilien Nicolas Colleye of Liège, Belgium, on this gun retailed by August Gottlieb Schüler of Suhl:

mJags4N.jpg


Here is an earlier version of the Lefaucheux action Brybenn pictured above, this one on a gun signed Châlet, Père et Fils of St. Étienne:

KotwSV6.jpg


To make the point anything is possible, you have the combination of a detachable wooden fore-end along with a Lefaucheux lever, like on this one by Jean-Baptiste Rongé et Fils of Liège:

WvZj4md.jpg


And then, you have the weird and wonderful world of bar-in-wood hammer guns, where everything is done to hide the fact there is an articulated fore-end at all.

Here is a John Blissett of London with the Joseph Vernon Needham patent side-lever fastener:

f8Ew2Rx.jpg

eqVr8hi.jpg


A semi-hidden bar-in-wood by Reuben Hambling of Salford, Manchester:

CR0SrpM.jpg


Exquisite bar-in-wood by Parker, Field & Sons of London:

L0mu8hb.jpg


Another bar-in-wood by William Powell & Son of Birmingham:

eErsD3s.jpg


And to finish, two bar-in-wood guns with the "crab-joint" by Westley Richards of Birmingham:

Pull-lever action:

nVjfEk8.jpg


Rotating lever action:

e8zz1xz.jpg


As you can tell, the matter of the fore-end on a breech-loader is of great interest to me, very much a part of the earliest development of the breech-loader.
 
Fore-end Fasteners/Releases

Something more recognizable today - the Deeley and Edge Latch, patented 1873.
Shown here in a Thomas Woodward from late 1870's, and a Browning BSS a hundred years later
GnYFAH0.jpg

4Y5Grk6.jpg
 
Crudgington and Baker's The British Shotgun, vol. two 1871-1890, contains a chapter of fore-end fastener mechanisms with patents by dozens of makers. Of these, only the Deeley and Edge (above) and the Anson pushrod release are still in common use. Like both Deeley and Edge, Anson worked for Westley Richards. Anson's patent dates to the same year, 1873.
Shown here on a J.W. Whyte, Darlington, circa 1885, with action built on the Anson and Deeley boxlock patent.
d1bkQi4.jpg

Mob1b5X.jpg
 
Today I was shooting a Powell hammer gun with a rather unique fastener and thought, "I'll post details of the patent filing and pics of this one". But the light was too bright and later I thought, nah, going to just step away from CGN. PM's will go to my email but otherwise, see you guys later.
 
Back
Top Bottom