Well, here it is again. This gun was a 2-frame GH-Grade built in 1889, with very straight and heavy 32-inch Damascus barrels with a requested weight of 9 1/2 pounds. As an aside, my Grandfather's 1890 PH-Grade 12-gauge is on a 3-frame but its cylinder bore 30-inch barrels swamp very fast, and it weighs 8 pounds 8 ounces. At some point in its life my GH-Grade lost two inches from its 12-gauge barrels. While Mark could find nothing in the records for it, my belief is it was back to Meriden sometime after 1918 but before about 1927, and got a set of 32-inch, 3-inch chambered, Vulcan Steel 20-gauge barrels. Both sets of barrels have the post-1910 bolt plate, and of course the receiver has the new bolt. The 20-gauge Vulcan barrels have the CT USA address, but do not have the Parker Bros. Overload Proof stamps. The 20-gauge 2-frame barrels swamp in very fast. The gun currantly weighs 9 pounds 0.5 ounces with the 12-gauge barrels and forearm in place and 8 pounds 4.5 ounces with the 20-gauge barrels and forearm in place. Makes Parker Bros. statements on the extra barrel listing shown on page 35 of the currant issue of
Parker Pages untrue?!?