Giftmacher
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- Hohenmauth CZ
Thank you my friends. I would like to wish merry Christmas and happy New Year to all people on this wonderful forum!
This is my maternal great-grandfather's Remington, model 1889 double-gun. I inherited it about forty years ago when I turned sixteen. When my grandmother gave it to me, it was missing its forestock and the buttstock was split just behind the locks. Someone in my family had repaired the stock by nailing and wireing it together with small cut nails, copper wire and tar tape. A crude repair to say the least. Over the years, I tried every source I could think of to locate an original stock assembly, but never had any luck. I thought the old gun would stand in the closet and forever gather dust.
But I thought that before there was an internet.
Amazingly, about two months ago, I found an old stock assembly on e-bay. Numrich Gun Parts was auctioning some stuff, and a vintage 1889 stock set was in the mix. I couldn't believe my good luck. I placed a great big ol' snipe on the auction and the assembly came home to me. A professional gunsmith did the tweaking necessary to get the vintage assembly to exactly fit my gun, and today I picked up the finished product.
Of course, I'll never shoot the gun. It was designed for black powder loads and the barrels are not in the best of condition. But it sure will look great over my fireplace. My mother's family was from the mountains of Tennessee and was very poor. They didn't have much, so not much was passed down from their generation to mine. Believe me, I am more than a little pleased to have this old shotgun...now in whole condition...to connect me with that part of my heritage.
Af
I think this is a good place to put my P.F.
Love those ads, brings back memories.Merry Christmas! (Happy Hanukkah?) Please be sure to post "Stocking Stuffers" on Christmas Day so we can see them almost as soon as you!
Well, this fine old gent showed up Thursday afternoon, a genuine 1917 built S&W 1917 with honest ear and a great bore!
It's the plated silver one if your wondering. I had to retire mine. A few shells got stuck in the cylinder. But they are easy wonderful, light, and fun to shoot though!
This is my maternal great-grandfather's Remington, model 1889 double-gun. today I picked up the finished product.
Af
When we first found it thats what we thought, but since we wanted to look at the history of the gun we looked in the official Smith and Wesson archive and catalog.(Btw excellent book I found mine in B&N) Which said that it was a bit more special. So we went and got it tested and it came back positive.Plated silver? Isn't that nickle?
And what shells where you using in it, that got stuck?