It's mid-October. The air is turning cooler and deer season is just around the corner. This time of year always makes me think of my Father. Police officer, master carpenter, and extremely talented muzzleloading rifle builder. In the middle 1950's he spotted an original Jacob Dickert rifle hanging on the wall of his friend Jack McBride's shop in Austin, TX. Jack let him disassemble the rifle and make detailed drawings. Before long he was on a first name basis with Turner Kirkland as he sought out parts to build one of his own. Starting with a block of maple and his drawings, he created a very good copy of the Dickert. He took that flintlock to a monthly match of the Austin Rifle Club where the good ol' boys were somewhat patronizing toward the guy who wanted to shoot his flintlock against their modern cartridge rifles. He won that match and repeated the performance for the next two months. Then he was informed that there had been a rule change. Cartridge Rifles Only. The word got around and eventually his rifles were added to the collections of Gaines DeGraffenried and John Shivers (son of former TX Governor Alan Shivers). He was a founding member of The Powder Horn Club where no cartridge rifles were allowed. At 7 years of age I was the youngest member. Dad built me a kid-sized rifle in .40 cal. The next season, at the ripe age of 8, I took a deer with it. Dad being a man who believed in education, I learned to clean and skin that deer while he watched and offered advice. Wanting to be sure I had learned my lesson, the next day I got to repeat the performance on the deer he shot.
I have no idea how many rifles Dad built in his lifetime. It was a bunch and almost all were in .45 caliber as he considered that to be sufficient for "anybody who can hit what they shoot at". I do remember his last one well. My wife and I had moved Dad in with us after my Mom died. I set his bench and tools up in my shop where I was trying to earn a living working on modern guns after retiring from a career in EMS. I'm attaching a photo of him holding his last rifle. You will note that it is still "in the white". He died a few days later and before finishing it. A day or so after his death I walked into my shop and saw the rifle leaning against his bench. I picked it up and knew it was up to me to finish it. I've attached a photo of the finished rifle.
John
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