A Rare Restored British Military Pattern 1800/1815/1823 Flintlock "Baker" Infantry Rifle

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A Rare Restored British Military Pattern 1800/1815/1823 Flintlock "Baker" Infantry Rifle, circa. 1805-1820's.  30.25", .62 caliber rifled barrel.  No visible proof marks.  The barrel originally was made with a bayonet bar which was later intentionally removed, and a socket bayonet lug mounted on the underside of the muzzle.  The barrel has been re-bushed (re-converted back to flintlock).  The original flint replacement flat lock is marked on the inside with military inspector mark of a "CROWN" over "3" and the outside has the "CROWN" over "W R" (King William IV 1830-1837), a small "CROWN" over the "BROAD ARROW" (government ownership mark).  The lock has an exterior sliding safety and shows where the restorer added metal to the lock plate to make it pointed as opposed to being round.  Standard all brass pattern furniture includes a pattern 1800 butt-trap which held tools and greased patches.  The rifle retains the original steel ram rod.  This rifle stock was made without a raised check rest.  The stock is solid and has an interesting marriage of wood at the beginning point of the lower ram rod pipe (very hard to see), overall, with scratches and dings from years of service.  A seldom encountered rifle !

Additional Notes: It is my opinion that the stock was either made in two sections or was restored at some point possibly when the barrel vent was re-bushed for the re-conversion back to flintlock.  The current lock is an original flint replacement.

TTI-544621

Note: Great Britain supplied Portugal with large quantities of surplus weapons for the Peninsula War (1807-1814) and after.  According to records, 150 rifles were modified and produced by Robert Wheeler in 1823.  The round face lock (copied from the pattern 1798 Heavy Dragoon Carbine) was the standard lock for the pattern 1823.

Ref. British Military Flintlock Rifles 1740-1840 by, De Witt Bailey Ph. D., c. 2002.

According to Wikipedia:  

The Peninsular War (1807–1814) was the military conflict fought by Spain and Portugal, assisted by the United Kingdom, against the invading and occupying forces of France for control of the Iberian Peninsula during the Napoleonic Wars. In Spain, it is considered to overlap with the Spanish War of Independence.[d] The war began when the French and Spanish armies invaded and occupied Portugal in 1807 by transiting through Spain, and it escalated in 1808 after Napoleonic France had occupied Spain, which had been its ally. Napoleon Bonaparte forced the abdications of Ferdinand VII and his father Charles IV and then installed his brother Joseph Bonaparte on the Spanish throne and promulgated the Bayonne Constitution. Most Spaniards rejected French rule and fought a bloody war to oust them. The war on the peninsula lasted until the Sixth Coalition defeated Napoleon in 1814, and it is regarded as one of the first wars of national liberation and is significant for the emergence of large-scale guerrilla warfare.

The war began in Spain with the Dos de Mayo Uprising on 2 May 1808 and ended on 17 April 1814 with the restoration of Ferdinand VII to the monarchy. The French occupation destroyed the Spanish administration, which fragmented into quarrelling provincial juntas. The episode remains as the bloodiest event in Spain's modern history, doubling in relative terms the Spanish Civil War.[10]

A reconstituted national government, the Cortes of Cádiz—in effect a government-in-exile—fortified itself in the secure port of Cádiz in 1810, but could not raise effective armies because it was besieged by 70,000 French troops. British and Portuguese forces eventually secured Portugal, using it as a safe position from which to launch campaigns against the French army and provide whatever supplies they could get to the Spanish, while the Spanish armies and guerrillas tied down vast numbers of Napoleon's troops.[e] These combined regular and irregular allied forces, by restricting French control of territory, prevented Napoleon's marshals from subduing the rebellious Spanish provinces, and the war continued through years of stalemate.[11]

The British Army, under then Lt. Gen. Sir Arthur Wellesley, later the 1st Duke of Wellington, guarded Portugal and campaigned against the French in Spain alongside the reformed Portuguese army. The demoralized Portuguese army was reorganized and refitted under the command of Gen. William Beresford,[12] who had been appointed commander-in-chief of the Portuguese forces by the exiled Portuguese royal family, and fought as part of the combined Anglo-Portuguese Army under Wellesley.

In 1812, when Napoleon set out with a massive army on what proved to be a disastrous French invasion of Russia, a combined allied army under Wellesley pushed into Spain, defeating the French at Salamanca and taking the capital Madrid. In the following year Wellington scored a decisive victory over King Joseph Bonaparte's army in the Battle of Vitoria. Pursued by the armies of Britain, Spain and Portugal, Marshal Jean-de-Dieu Soult, no longer getting sufficient support from a depleted France, led the exhausted and demoralized French forces in a fighting withdrawal across the Pyrenees during the winter of 1813–1814.

The years of fighting in Spain were a heavy burden on France's Grande Armée. While the French were victorious in battle, they were eventually defeated, as their communications and supplies were severely tested and their units were frequently isolated, harassed or overwhelmed by partisans fighting an intense guerrilla war of raids and ambushes. The Spanish armies were repeatedly beaten and driven to the peripheries, but they would regroup and relentlessly hound and demoralize the French troops. This drain on French resources led Napoleon, who had unwittingly provoked a total war, to call the conflict the "Spanish Ulcer".[13][14]

War and revolution against Napoleon's occupation led to the Spanish Constitution of 1812, promulgated by the Cortes of Cádiz, later a cornerstone of European liberalism.[15] The burden of war destroyed the social and economic fabric of Portugal and Spain, and ushered in an era of social turbulence, increased political instability, and economic stagnation. Devastating civil wars between liberal and absolutist factions, led by officers trained in the Peninsular War, persisted in Iberia until 1850. The cumulative crises and disruptions of invasion, revolution and restoration led to the independence of most of Spain's American colonies and the independence of Brazil, which remained a monarchy, after severing ties with Portugal.

 TTI-544621