Joseph Lang

6pt-sika

Well-Known Member
I’m going to look at a Joseph Lang 10 bore hammer gun with a Jones underlever fully rifled barrels express Leaf sights and safeties on both hammers . Give me some insight into the maker please . Kinda had it in my head for several years now that I’d like an 8-10 or 12 bore double rifle , this may be my opportunity .
 
Very well respected maker and up there in first division had my hands on several sidelock game guns and all very nice as you would expect.
 
You will probably be aware of a uk sight called gun trader there are several fine Lang sidelocks including a interesting looking 10 bore under lever. Guntrader.uk👍
 
Lang was one of the top London gunmakers. If it had remained in business would be in the same sentence as holland, purdey, boss and grant.

A little more history of something at the opposite end of scale at the end of this post.

The 10 bore and 12 bore express rifles where the every day big game rifle of 1870’s to 1880/90’s by which time the Nitro Expresses came into play.

This period of about 30 years you went from muzzle loaders, through breech loaders to modern high velocity smokeless powders. And your rifles went from bore guage black powder at speed of sound to 7x57 high velocity at twice the speed.

I suppose a bit like we have gone from telex and air mail letters that would take hours and days / weeks to arrive on the other side of the world to writing a note a portable device that you will read within seconds of me writing it.

When those guns were made your order would have travelled by horse, steam train and sail or possibly a steam ship across the Atlantic and couple of years later it would have arrived back. I suspect many of these rifles never saw much use - new technologies quickly came to the fore and they were obsolete. Many would simply been put away in their case, hopefully cleaned and well oiled, and put in the back corner of the gunroom of one of the many large country houses only to resurface many decades later when an heir needs to raise some cash to pay school fees or reroof the castle.

And the buyers usually had the money to keep themselves up to date - although plenty went bankrupt in the process.

 
Lang invented the .470 Nitro Express and the original Mr Lang was married, I believe to James Purdey's daughter. Later, at once time, Webley owned Lang. Lang guns therefore can be found in various coverages of engraving from all fully engraved, to part engraved to minimal engraving. Were they a "first rank" maker? In strict terms no that's Purdey, Boss, Holland in that these were the "big three" of the London makers. Does that matter? Only if the name is important to you. Often not at all as you'll see Lang guns of types...such as the OP's asked about hammer rifle...that you likely won't see any Purdey or Boss or Holland contemporary equivalent.

The best book IMHO on these hammer "bore" rifles is "Gun, Rifle and Hound" which covers the transition from these weapons to the .450 and similar calibres that heralded in the Express era. I've somewhere the family copy of it although I suspect that the reason my family acquired it was more for the "hound" element than the "rifle" element. He describes an ideal African battery, an economy African battery and, yes, that these "bore" rifles can be picked up quite cheaply now that the .450 and other Express calibres have debuted.

 
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Well the Lang hit the block today , hammer price with premium added was $3600 (2850 British pounds). I didn’t bid being the cheap skate I am was hoping to get it bought for a bit less .
 
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