When I was researching the history of American gun culture, I spent quite a bit of time looking for evidence of gunsmiths—both those who made guns, and those who repaired them. What was quite intriguing to me was how often gunsmithing was a craft that passed down from father to son.
I suppose that this should not have been a surprise. Until the federal government consciously transformed gun making from a craft to an industrial enterprise, starting in the 1790s, gunsmithing would have been like any other occupation of the time: your shop was in your home, or perhaps immediately adjacent to it. It would only be natural that your children would be pressed into service, learn the skills, and take over the family business when the father died, or became too old to perform the most physically demanding aspects, such as forging barrels.
William Henry I’s descendants were making guns for at least five generations, ending with Granville Henry in the 1890s. We are fortunate that unlike many of the other early gunmaking families, for the Henrys, we have a surprisingly complete sets of documents. William Henry I’s son, William Henry II, moved gun making operations to Nazareth around 1778, gradually expanding into a modern factory after 1792. The volume of surviving documents provides extensive evidence of the scale of the Henry family gun making business, and the business sophistication of its proprietors.
Along with these examples of gunsmith families that are well documented and easy to follow, there are many others where gunsmithing was, so to speak, in the genes, but the records are simply not complete enough to do more than suggest the extent. We often have a few surviving firearms made by members of these families, but exact dates and relationships are often impossible to determine, such as the Sheetz (or Sheets) family of Lancaster and York Counties in Pennsylvania. We have dates for Philip Sheetz, but for fifteen of his descendants and cousins in the Revolutionary period and early Republic, we know only that they worked as gunsmiths, but not the exact years.
During my research into early American gunsmiths, I have made a point of recording every such worker where I can identify a location and date. For the period through 1840, I have identified more than 2300 such gunsmiths. Some are obvious father and son relationships. Henry Watkeys appears as a gunsmith in 1775 New York City—and 25 years later, Henry Watkeys, Jr. is a gunsmith in that same city. Similarly, Hendrick Van Dewater, Sr. was a gunsmith in New York City 1717-20—and Hendrick Van Dewater, Jr., was a gunsmith in that same city 1727-84.
In many cases, there are unusual last names that suggest a family relationship, such as Casper Yost of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, John Yost of Georgetown, Maryland, and Henry Yost of Frederick County, Maryland, all around the time of the Revolution. Similarly, a Richard Wingert was a gunsmith in Lancaster, Pennsylvania during the Revolution, and a William Wingert is a gunsmith in 1837 Detroit—almost fifty years later.
1 Asa H. Waters, Gun Making in Sutton and Millbury (Worcester, Mass.: Lucius P. Goddard, 1878), 3-5; Felicia Johnson Deyrup, Arms Makers of the Connecticut Valley: A Regional Study of the Economic Development of the Small Arms Industry, 1798-1870 (Menasha, Wisc.: George Banta Publishing Co., 1948), 33.
2 Deyrup, Arms Makers of the Connecticut Valley, 33; “Colonel Seth Pomeroy,” The American Review 7[May, 1848]:461; M.L. Brown, Firearms in Colonial America (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1980), 149-150.
3 Historical Society of Pennsylvania Henry Papers, 2:9, at Historical Society of Pennsylvania (hereinafter HSP Henry Papers).
4 HSP Henry Papers, 1:7, 2:18, 20, 21, 29.
5 Henry Papers at Hagley Museum and Library (hereinafter, Hagley Henry Papers), accession 1309, series 2, box 8.
6 Samuel Hazard, ed., Colonial Records of Pennsylvania (Harrisburg, Penn.: Theo Fenn, 1852), 10:523.
7 Hazard, Colonial Records of Pennsylvania, 11:506.
8 Thomas E. Holt, “Pennsylvania 1798 Contract Muskets,” American Society of Arms Collectors 2 [November, 1956], 19-20; Arcadi Gluckman, United States Muskets, Rifles and Carbines (Buffalo, N.Y.: Otto Ulbrich Co., 1948), 69-82, 104-116.
9 Series 2, Folder 7, Hagley Henry Papers.
10 Charles Z. Tryon, The History Of A Business Established One Hundred Years Ago (Philadelphia: n.p. [1911]).
11 Earl S. Heffner, Jr., The Moll Gunsmiths (Point Lookout, Mo.: School of the Ozarks, Book Division, 1972), 5-6.
12 Henry J. Kauffman, The Pennsylvania-Kentucky Rifle (Morgantown, Penn.: Masthof Press, 2005), 100.
13 William Jacob Heller, “The Gun Makers of Old Northampton,” 7, in Henry Melchior Muhlenberg Richards, ed., The Pennsylvania-German in the Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 (Lancaster, Penn.: New Era Printing Co., 1908).
14 Heffner, The Moll Gunsmiths, 13-14, 18-19, 21-24, 27.
15 Sylvester Nash, The Nash Family; or Records of the Descendants of Thomas Nash of New Haven, Connecticut, 1640 (Hartford, Conn.: Case, Tiffany & Co., 1853), 13-14, 16.
16 Nash, The Nash Family, 19-20.
17 Charles J. Hoadly, ed., Records Of The Colony And Plantation Of New Haven, From 1638 To 1649 (Hartford,
Conn.: Case, Tiffany, 1857), 176-77; Clayton E. Cramer, "America's First Firearms Product Liability Suit?", Shotgun News, November 19, 2001, 18-19.
18 Nash, The Nash Family, 24, 27.
19 Nash, The Nash Family, 37.
20 Joseph H. Smith, ed., Colonial Justice in Western Massachusetts (1639-1702): The Pynchon Court Record, An Original Judges' Diary of the Administration of Justice in the Springfield Courts in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961), 362-3.
21 James Whisker, The Gunsmith’s Trade (Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 1992), 14-15.
22 Daniel D. Hartzler, Arms Makers of Maryland (George Shumway: York, Penn. 1977), 169-92.
23 Hartzler, Arms Makers of Maryland, 238-44.
24 Henry J. Kauffman, Early American Gunsmiths: 1650-1850 (New York: Bramhall House, 1952), 73.
25 Hartzler, Arms Makers of Maryland, 51, 212-16.
26 New Trade Directory for Philadelphia, Anno 1800 (Philadelphia: n.p., 1800), 75.
27 William Henry Egle, ed., Pennsylvania Archives (Harrisburg, Penn.: William Stanley Ray, 1897), 3rd ser., 14:225.
28 Thomas Stephens, Stephen’s Philadelphia Directory, For 1796 (Philadelphia: n.p., 1796).
29 New Trade Directory for Philadelphia, Anno 1800 (Philadelphia: n.p., 1800), 75.
30 Whisker, The Gunsmith’s Trade, 4-5.