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#3 | ||||||
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It looks like it was refinished either recently or a long time ago and never used?
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#4 | ||||||
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It looks like you have a V grade made in 1919. It is not in the serialization book so I can't tell you the original factory specifications, but there are record available for a research letter for this serial number. It is a very nice looking gun and to my untrained eye looks like it has some restoration work done. The case coloring looks to be the cyanide type which would have not been factory Parker, but done sometime later. I am sure some of the experts here can give you more information. What is the barrel length?
Congratulations on a nice family Parker! Those are the best kind. Can you tell us anything about it's history? |
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I don't know. My Dad passed in 2003. He had an index card on it that just said, "A valuable old double because of the name Parker", with my name written below, an indication that he wanted me to have it. He grew up in rural Mississippi. I don't know if the gun came from his father's side, or from my Mother's side. Both sides of the family were avid hunters. My Dad had stopped hunting by the late 1980's or early 1990's. He had a duck gun he always used (a Japanese Browning) and a Winchester he used for dove and quail. I can't remember him ever using this gun. If he refinished it, I never new about it. He did take good care of his guns, though. I have about a dozen of his collection (my brother having the other half).
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#8 | ||||||
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It is a restored gun.
Engraving had been recut. You can see it in a couple of the photos that the walked borders are double cut. The colors are cyanide type which is not correct for an original Parker gun. And you can see a buffing line on the frame going back from the bolster. This is also proof of refinish. It is said that this is a sign of a Delgrego refinish based on the way they buffed/polished the frames out for coloring. But this is a result of the way the metal prep was done, not specifically who did the work. But... Given that and the colors, I would wager Delgrego restored the gun.
__________________
B. Dudley |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Brian Dudley For Your Post: |
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#9 | ||||||
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Restored or not it is a nice V grade and deserves to be hunted.
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#10 | ||||||
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A lot of people hesitate to give values....but I'll tell you it is worth more than $1000. Less than $5000. More than $1500. Less than $4000. Probably between $2K and $3K assuming the bores are nice and the barrels are not cut. Probably closer to $2K than $3K.
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