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-   -   Invincibles (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=7509)

Daryl Corona 07-14-2012 04:15 PM

On the top shelf of a closet that noone noticed? Are you kidding me?You gentlemen truly amaze me and keep me in awe with your knowledge of things Parker. I could read this stuff all day. Don't stop unless it is to replenish your supply of an amber liquid. :bowdown:

Bill Murphy 07-14-2012 04:52 PM

Well, if the Roosevelt Room is temporarily shut down this would be good time to move the Big Five Parkers into the Petersen Room where they belong. Thanks for the update, Kevin.

Kevin McCormack 07-14-2012 06:06 PM

There is no room in the Peterson Room for any more guns at this time. The former contents of the gun cabinets in what will become "Teddy's Room" are gone, or as in the favored parlance of all museum curators, "This exhibit has been temorarily removed." Things are being shuffled around at the museum - even the Holland & Holland "Civil War Centennial Series" guns are all alone in a back alcove in their lovely case that H&H built for them. Stay tuned....

George M. Purtill 07-15-2012 04:08 PM

George Lane
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin McCormack (Post 74196)
Thanks, Kevin.
Where can I learn more about him? He did custom upgraded checkering on two guns I have. He brought DHE checkering up to BHE and did a very nice job

George Lane joined Parker Bros. in 1901 as a checkerer and took a sort of 'leave of absence" (approved by his boss and Parker Bros.) in 1908 to investigate and perfect his skills in painting, photography and wood carving. He somehow engineered a job for 8 or 9 years as a personal chauffer to a widow to a bigwig with International Silver Co., which of course was centered in Meriden at the time. He apparently spent his idle time improving his craft at these three pursuits.

Around 1919 he returned to Parker Bros. and a few years after that took over as checkering contractor. Unfortunately for Remington, when they moved the Parker works to Ilion from Meriden around 1937, Lane did not accompany the move. When it became apparent after the move to Ilion that Remington needed a master checkerer (some engravers actually did the work from about 1938-1940), Lane fabricated a set of tools identical to his own used at Parker Bros. for use on the AA and A-1 Special grade guns and sent them to Ilion.

Bob Runge told me that when the "Lost Invincible" was restocked by the Del Gregos, they used some of George Lane's original checkering layouts to exactly duplicate the pattern and execution. Bob himself did the carvings.

Kevin- Thanks so much on the Lane backstory. Would you consider a Parker Pages piece. See photos in a new thread about to be started by me.


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