Such great hammerguns, ParksPipes, and a good array of examples of late Victorian gunmaking. As all of these gunmakers you illustrate started by making pin-fire versions before moving on to the central-fire system, I can provide pictures of each of them in their pin-fire version, but perhaps I'll save that for another day. I will focus on one in particular, the Pape, as others have commented on it too. Fancy metalwork and flashy chequering patterns were the norm on Pape's guns, and you'll never find a boring one. Being from Newcastle in the north of England, William Rochester Pape was not one of the elite clique of London makers. While this could put one at a disadvantage society-wise, being closer to popular shooting grounds made up for it. Also, Pape tirelessly promoted his wares, competed fiercely in the public trials, and used the media to his fullest advantage. He was an inventor, and came up with very clever designs. However, what he should be remembered for is his method for boring barrels so as to create choke.
Apologies for repeating what I may have posted before about Pape, but I am lazy in my dimished state, I have no time for taking better pictures, and it is soon time for my nap...
The paradigm shift between the pin-fire and the central-fire systems was not a sudden one. Just as the first pin-fire guns sought to imitate the looks of the muzzle-loader, the first central-fire guns borrowed much of the design and decorative features of the pin-fire. But technology at the time was moving apace, faster than we perhaps recognize today, with changes in steel-making, barrel-making, and propellants. One area where the guns of today have their roots firmly ensconced in the pin-fire game gun, is the subject of choke. Choke is one of those subjects that elicits strong responses. It is a clever solution to the problem of getting the most pellets into a given space, at a distance. To some, it is a panacea; to others a go-to excuse for missed shots. I consider choke a part of the mysterious, unknowable phenomena that occur milliseconds after the propellant ignites, hidden from view and happening too fast for human senses to make sense of.
Trying to make shotgun barrels shoot evenly, consistently, and pattern tightly has been on gunmakers’ minds since, well, guns. Before the days of compressed fluid steel barrels, the process of making barrels involved many different craftsmen, often in other countries. In Europe, the area around Liege, Belgium, produced the best barrel tubes of twist and damascus. They made the finest patterns, free of the defects that plagued tube forgers in other regions, such as Birmingham. Birmingham barrels might have been suitable for Brown Besses and Enfield pattern muskets in their tens of thousands, but few were of the grade required for fine sporting guns – Belgium was the preferred source. But the tubes are just the starting point.
While barrel boring for best results was a subject of conversation in
The Field in the 1850s, it was still mysterious in that there were no standards, only gunmaker secrets. Some claimed opening the bore towards the muzzle gave tighter patterns, while others, correctly, believed the opposite to be preferred. There were fantastical claims of impossibly long shots on game, pooh-poohed as Munchausen-esque by bewhiskered gentlemen over cigars and port. Wonderful reading.
While the invention of choke boring in Britain cannot be attributed to any one person or a specific century, the first patent can, and the honour goes to William Rochester Pape of Newcastle. But before bestowing too much credit, he included his method for choke boring as an afterthought to his patent for a new breech-loader action, which he obtained on 29 May 1866 and given No. 1501. The Pape action consisted of two bolts on a vertical spindle, operated by a small thumb lever to the right of and just in front of the trigger guard, under spring tension. The bottom bolt engages with a slot in the barrel lump, and the upper bolt engages with an extension above the barrels. Pape claimed that the action was self-tightening so that even after wear and tear, it would remain tight. This was advantageous as becoming loose over time was one of the biggest fears of the snap-actions at the time. The patent concentrated on the action, not on the choke boring, and it was not renewed in 1873, suggesting Pape did not consider choke boring to be of particular importance at the time. As choke boring became a ‘thing’ when everyone started doing it, Pape stated to be its inventor, a claim shared with great acrimony with another Newcastle-born gunmaker, William Wellington Greener. In 1875, to settle the matter,
The Field set up a committee to decide the winner, and Pape won the £10 prize because of his patent. It did not stop Greener from subsequently claiming it was nevertheless he who perfected choke boring, to anyone who would listen.
It was with guns of the 1866 patent that William Rochester Pape won
The Field trial of 1866 in London. The trial was explicitly set up to pit choke-bored guns against each other, and against un-choked guns. In the 12-bore class, Pape took first, second, fifth and seventh place out of a field of 32 guns (1st, 2nd and 5th were pin-fires, and 7th was a central-fire). Greener took third place with a ‘wedge fast’ pin-fire of his make. Only two guns took part in the 16-bore class, and Pape won with a pin-fire gun. Interestingly, pin-fire guns outperformed central-fire guns on that day, the last great hurrah of the pin-fire in Britain.
On 3 September 1867, Pape was granted patent No. 2488 for an improved design incorporating his thumb lever (sometimes called a ‘tap’ lever or ‘butterfly’ lever), and this latter patent is the one which is most frequently seen on Pape’s central-fire guns [as in the case with ParksPipes's pinture], as he continued making them for some years. It can be distinguished from the first patent by the angle of the thumb lever, which lies at more of a right angle to the gun. Pape could not have sold many guns of the first patent in the short 14-month period between the two designs.
Pape was known for having guns built for him in Birmingham, but he also produced them in his Newcastle workshop, where he employed nine workers and four apprentices. Whether Pape himself made guns is an open question. He aggressively and tirelessly promoted his business, such as participating in the trials and advertising widely in the sporting and general press. Of his 1866 patent gun, which he sold for £40, he announced it in
The Field, the
English Mechanic and Mirror of Science, and local papers, including the
Derby Mercury, the
Gateshead Observer, the
Kelso Chronicle, the
Leicester Mail, the
Lincolnshire Chronicle, the
Newcastle Courant, the
Newcastle Daily Chronicle, the
Newcastle Guardian and Tyne Mercury, the
Newcastle Journal, and the
Shields Daily News. This rush of advertising was more self-promotion than an expectation of business, as the number of people who could afford his most expensive gun would be few – but one can dream, I suppose. In his adverts, Pape could claim to have
“Won the only three great Sporting Gun Trials Open to the World,” and offering
“...unrivalled Steel-Barreled BREECH LOADERS made with our New Patent Pin or Central Fire Actions… all Bored upon Pape’s Principle, which stands unequalled by proof of Public Contests.” His range of guns started at £12, which was still a good bit of money then. Pape spent much of his time pursuing his other interests, namely dog breeding and falconry (in 1859, Pape organized the first dog show in Britain, held at the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Corn Exchange, offering one of his shotguns as a prize).
What does a £40, 1866-patent, William Rochester Pape pin-fire game gun look like? Here’s one. And it is the 13th gun built to this patent. It is a 12-bore made in 1866, number 1366. The top rib is signed
“W. R. Pape Newcastle on Tyne Winner of the London Gun Trials 1858, 1859, & 1866 Patent no. 13.” The bar locks are marked
“W. R. Pape,” and the action body is fluted in shape and engraved
“W. R. Pape’s Patent.” The barrel has Pape's initials, so I am confident it was made in the Newcastle workshop and not Birmingham. Being one of the very first produced, I am also confident that Pape would have handled and inspected it, even if his hands did not make it. The gun is decorated in best foliate engraving with dogs in ovals (very appropriate, on a Pape gun). The hammers are well sculpted, and the forearm has ornate chequering borders, both characteristics of the maker. The gun weighs a hefty 7 lb 14 oz, suggesting it might have been built as a live-pigeon gun. Pape guns have always been well regarded for their quality, and by the late 1800s, Pape was known as
“the Purdey of the North.”