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Inside view of a lock of a musket from the Town Guard

1745, Metal, Wood
Inside view of a lock of a musket from the Town Guard
Inside view of a lock of a musket from the Town Guard
Inside view of a lock of a musket from the Town Guard
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Category
Museums & Galleries Item
Item no
41058
Title
Inside view of a lock of a 1730 musket belonging to the Edinburgh Town Guard
Description
The inside view of a lock removed from a 1730 Long Land type of musket belonging to the Edinburgh Town Guard. The main components of the inside of the lock are the two springs on either end (one activated by the trigger to fire the cock forward, and the other spring, almost the entire length of the inside of the lock to keep it held in place inside the wooden stock). To the right is firing mechanism consisting of a metal "tumbler" catch set behind a banana shaped flat plate. Inside the lock plate are three stamps; the initials "EI" inside a rectangular (Edward Jordan, the Birmingham-based lock maker who made the lock), a letter S with a crown, and a double stamped crowned "21". Protruding from behind the lock, on the outside, are the moving cock with jaws used to hold a flint in place, and the slilghtly curved striking platform (the "frizzen") against which the flint strikes to create a spark. Between the cock and frizzen is the hollowed out pan where the priming shot powder is placed. Once ignited by the spark, the priming powder then ignites the powder inside the barrel and fires the gun.
Date
1745
Size
157 x 13 cm
Type
Metal; Wood
Location
Museum of Edinburgh
Accession number
HH50/01/1901