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#3 | ||||||
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Welcome Dan, Parker owners have no issue shooting "museum guns". DH is my favorite grade of Parker. Looking forward to seeing some pics.
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If it were easy, everyone would do it. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Dean H Hanson For Your Post: |
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#4 | ||||||
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Welcome Dan, Your gun is listed in the Parker Serialization Book as a DH straight stock with 30" Titanic Steel barrels.
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#5 | |||||||
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From what I can tell: - DH/Grade 3 12ga. - 30" Titanic barrels. - All parts have matching serial #s (trigger guard, water table, internals, barrels, foregrip) - 2 Frame I'm a little confused as to the barrel weight, though. Per the "Technical Information" of the website, I'd expect to only see a single number on the underside of the barrels, but instead I see...two? There's a "4" and a "3." Not sure how to make heads or tails of that. Are the barrel weights different for each barrel or something? Also not sure if the "X" marking on the spot where the barrel connects to the foregrip matters or is really just an "X marks the spot/grip goes here, dummy" situation. Checkering on the foregrip and stock are well defined to my uneducated touch, but the wood is in good condition. Engraving is still pretty well defined. I may try to take additional pictures for the engraving ahead of the trigger guard, since I think it's actually better defined than what the picture shows, and has more to do with my camera/camera skills than wear. (You'll note I apparently have next to no creases in my hand, which makes me think my camera was having trouble deciding where to focus.) I have no idea how to evaluate barrel condition on the interior. Anyway, here's a photo album of the gun with pictures I took tonight. Unrelated, but my dad apparently also had about 1 and 2/3 boxes of 12ga shells, probably from the late 60s. (Mom met him in the early 70s, and has no memory of him ever going shooting, so these guns have basically been unfired and sitting in one closet or another for at least 50 years.) I've included a picture of one of the boxes for fun. I look forward to hearing folks' thoughts on this piece. It's interesting having the Ithaca Lefever Nitro to compare to it. Both seem solid, but (A) the Parker was cared for way more (or used way less?), and (B) the Parker is just so much more of a work of art by comparison. The engraving is just gorgeous, and the detail on the wood is really striking by comparison. Both have engraving, but the Parker is way more detailed and finely wrought than the Ithaca, even though they're separated by only 32 years. It's like seeing the difference between Art Nouveau and Art Deco in shotgun form. |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Dan Shay For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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That is one nice unaltered straight-stocked DH!
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#7 | ||||||
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Thanks! I'd love to figure out how it wound up in my dad's hands. I have a hunch it came from his father, who had (at one time) one of the largest antique firearms collections on the East Coast I'm told. (My only remaining proof of this is the flintlock blunderbuss he gave me when he was liquidating his collection. It's all rusted to hell and gone, but the lock and trigger mechanism still work!)
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#8 | ||||||
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Perhaps your dad didn't shoot the Parker much, but he took good care of it.
He may have been saving it to give to someone special in his life. No way I could I sell that gun. If you have any children, give it to one of them. They'd likely be hhonored to own their Grandfather's (or possibly Great Grandfather's) Parker! |
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#9 | ||||||
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Dan, welcome to the PGCA! There is more Parker knowledge existent in this membership than you can imagine. Be willing to ask any question you wish and someone will be able to assist.
As far as what you do with the gun, please take your time in whether you want to sell it. While it is in very good condition, it is not a 'museum piece' per se; very few Parkers are. They were made to use for hunting or casual shooting [a few are used extensively at clay targets] and enjoying. I am guessing you are under 40 years old; maybe under 30 and your Dad has passed. I get it that he did not use it much so there is likely no connection to any adventures he shared with you with the Parker, so your memories with your Dad lie in different activities. But do your research when you can and hold onto it for a while before making a final decision. Your Dad kept it all those years for a reason; maybe it is for you, maybe someone else in the family. Either way, it is yours for now to do with it as you wish. Good luck. |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to J. Scott Hanes For Your Post: |
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#10 | ||||||||
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Neither I nor my mom knew he had this gun. As far as I know, it spent 50 years just sitting in his closet, along with a couple other shotguns and an old .22 target rifle (I knew he had the .22 and one of the shotguns -- an Ithaca Model 37, but didn't realize he had two SXS shotguns.) He figured I wouldn't get much for the other guns, but the Parker he said specifically to sell. He'd had it appraised years ago (although I'm not taking the value he told me as the current value), and figured it'd actually be worth a bit, whereas the others weren't really worth much (and based on a quick spin on gunbroker to check, they don't seem to be). Anyway, I'll figure out what to do with it eventually. In the meantime, it's resting comfortably in my safe. Can anyone explain the two numbers on the barrel underside? The 4 and the 3? I gather one of them is supposed to be barrel weight, but...why are there two numbers? |
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