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-   -   gunbroker 233499844 (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=4494)

Brent Francis 06-08-2011 08:46 PM

gunbroker 233499844
 
I was looking a an old DH 12 ga listed on gunbroker. The gun is advertised as a DH but the engraving looks like a cross between a G and a D. The serial number is very low in the 58,000 range and I wondered is this an early variation of D engraving? anyone know?

David Long 06-08-2011 09:28 PM

Book says made in 1889 grade 3 capped pistol grip hammerless Looks right to me so it is a early DH

Brent Francis 06-08-2011 09:33 PM

wow 1889 thats getting back there. Must of been one of the earliest D hammerless guns

Dave Suponski 06-08-2011 10:03 PM

Brent, 55296 is the first hammerless D grade gun.

Brent Francis 06-08-2011 10:16 PM

If im reading the serial numbers right this one was made a year after the first DH. I wonder how many older ones are still out there.

Dean Romig 06-08-2011 10:29 PM

Good eye on the engraving Brent. That is a very nice example of the earliest hammerless Grade 3 engraving style. It is indeed very close to the Grade 2 engraving style, only slightly more elaborate and with bird dogs in the vignette rather than the birds depicted on the Grade 2 guns. It was early in "Harry" Gough's tenure as chief engraver (1887 - 1898) that the later, more elaborate engraving styles were adopted and were kept right up through the end of Parker production in the Remington era and the onset of WW II.

Joe Wood 06-08-2011 11:39 PM

Here's a closeup of engraving on a DH from 1889 I own. I think it's very similar to the gun you're looking at. I've always considered this early work to be very well done, arguably better than when the later D style was formalized. I especially like the border work on these early guns.

http://i169.photobucket.com/albums/u.../PB2900082.jpg

Tom Carter 06-09-2011 06:34 AM

1889 D
 
Joe, Could you show pictures of the entire gun? It's beautiful engraving.

Thanks, Tom

Brent Francis 06-09-2011 08:15 AM

Joe I like the older engraving too. Ive got a D from 1892. It has the more ornate scroll work but the dogs are very nicely done like on yours.

Brent Francis 06-09-2011 09:04 AM

what always strikes me is how the same hand that did those realistic dogs would create those odd birds. I guess it was the time period for impressionism so maybe Gough did the dogs and Van Gough did the birds.


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