What is this? Identifying Springfield yard sale find

FreshPrince711

Private
Joined
Apr 27, 2025
Hello!

I was hoping the community would help me identify this Springfield rifle musket. I got it at a yard sale a few miles down the road from my apartment for $700. I am unsure if it's an original with field repairs, a post-war pieced together, or really old replica.

Things I noticed:

-wood shrinking (most evident on the butt plate)
-lack of serial numbers or reproduction markings.
-amount of cleaned rust marks
-mismatched 1863 bands/hammer with 1861 lock
-markings under the barrel tang

Along with this I'd like to know what these stamps mean. There's and X under the trigger guard, an L on the right side of the front barrel band, and whatever under the tang means.

Thank you!

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A Model1861 lock would not be on a M1863 musket. So since the rest of the gun appears to be late war, too me the lock is a total replacement. The hammer screw looks newer than the plate or hammer. So I think someone assembled the lock out of original parts to complete the gun. It's like a lot of these old muskets, plenty of original parts available, and someone used them to complete a civil war musket. So I think the parts of the guns saw the war, just not as the assembled musket you see before you.
 
The ramrod is a reproduction. The barrel bands and sling swivel are on backwards. The rear sight is missing the long range leaf.
I just flipped the barrel bands around. Not sure what you mean by the sling swivels are backwards. As it stands now that I flipped the bands. The screw is on the right for the bands and on the left for the sling screw on the trigger guard. Does the trigger guard screw/swivel need flipped too?
 
A Model1861 lock would not be on a M1863 musket. So since the rest of the gun appears to be late war, too me the lock is a total replacement. The hammer screw looks newer than the plate or hammer. So I think someone assembled the lock out of original parts to complete the gun. It's like a lot of these old muskets, plenty of original parts available, and someone used them to complete a civil war musket. So I think the parts of the guns saw the war, just not as the assembled musket you see before you.
Frankenmusket
 
The swelled part is made as a separate part from the long shaft. The entire rod was made in one piece on originals.

Yes, the trigger guard screw/swivel needs flipped as well.
I got a scope down the barrel. Do you know why it's super shiny at the bottom? Did they fix something with lead?
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This is just a guess, but I would bet that this gun fell into the hands of a reenactor that cleaned it up to look new and replaced the ramrod and nipple so that it could shoot blanks. Prior to that it was a relatively intact rifle-musket in attic condition.
A Model1861 lock would not be on a M1863 musket. So since the rest of the gun appears to be late war, too me the lock is a total replacement. The hammer screw looks newer than the plate or hammer. So I think someone assembled the lock out of original parts to complete the gun. It's like a lot of these old muskets, plenty of original parts available, and someone used them to complete a civil war musket. So I think the parts of the guns saw the war, just not as the assembled musket you see before you.
Quick question. I got a scope down the barrel and found this at the bottom. What is it, why is it super shiny? Is it safe to fire blanks?
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