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05-14-2024, 11:16 PM | #13 | ||||||
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David your SA is fabulous! The only problem is that your thread has about ruined several computers from all the saliva dripping from the mouths of the respondents! That is one great Parker and it just shows that there are still great guns just sitting around waiting for someone to take an interest. Many on here are interested in this one!!
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05-14-2024, 11:31 PM | #14 | ||||||
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David, are the initials on the grip cap your father's?
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05-15-2024, 09:59 AM | #15 | ||||||
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Thank you all for your input. The documentation request is in the mail and I will report back when I have that information.
The guns were collected by my grandfather. He was not a wealthy person at all and I would guess these were his most valued possessions. I shot a few of the SxS guns at times with him in the 1980's - I do not believe they have been used since and likely have not seen the light of day but a couple of times in the last 30+ years. I am honored by you all taking interest in this gun. I think he would get a good laugh out of being the old country lawyer showing up to a gun show in his barely running Chrysler with a German Short Hair riding shotgun and a layer of dog hair and dirt so thick in the car you could hardly tell the interior color. But out of that car he would pull this gun and maybe another and give a little smile and say - oh its just something i had behind the door. He was a great man from a great generation. Here is a picture of my other favorite gun from my little collection.. Taken in Alsace France December 1944. Last edited by David Safris; 05-15-2024 at 10:00 AM.. Reason: add photo |
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05-15-2024, 10:05 AM | #16 | ||||||
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This gun would have been made around the time my grandfather was born. So there is no chance this is original to our family. The initials do not match to anyone I can think of. He grew up on a farm in rural Nebraska and I dont think they had the money to buy a chicken let alone a fancy shot gun. After WWII he had a law practice in a small town and made enough to get by. I wish i had him write a story about each gun and how he came to own them .. but that is lost to time. My mom knows a little about the guns but nothing more than family stories. I can only imagine he was buying them from Field & Stream ads or something like that. I have no memory of him every traveling to a gun show out of state. But I he was most passionate about Parker guns and knew exactly the quality and importance of the guns. That part of it was very deliberate..
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05-15-2024, 10:47 AM | #17 | ||||||
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He had a good eye for guns.
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"Life is short and you're dead an awful long time." Destry L. Hoffard "Oh Christ, just shoot the damn thing." Destry L. Hoffard |
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05-15-2024, 11:02 AM | #18 | ||||||
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David... I looked through some old Trapshooting average books to see if I could find a listing for your grandfather, Fred Carstens. The only Carstens I found listed was a Charles from Wisner NE. (shooting in the late 20`s-early 30`s) Thanks for sharing the photos of your "great" Parker Trap gun and history of your grandfather...
Randy Davis |
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05-15-2024, 12:38 PM | #19 | ||||||
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Gaawwwddddd, how I love these "out-of-the-woodwork" tales!! My kingdom for a DGJ redivivus!!
David, your grandad was a "Hellcat," a member of one, kick-ass armored division that fought from Southern France all the way to Berlin. I'm betting a month after that photo was taken he was in the fight of his life, waist-deep in the Battle of Herrlisheim (Google it) where an entire tank battalion from the 12th Armored Div. vanished from existence. Another engrossing tale like countless others courtesy of the Greatest Generation. One day, a Nebraska farm boy, a few months later he's on an epic, momentous crusade to obliterate the most depraved, evil-minded race the world has ever known. Thanks for the morning goosebumps!! And oh, BTW, a beautiful Parker to boot!!
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05-15-2024, 01:33 PM | #20 | |||||||
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Randy, is that Wisner, NB? I don't see a Wismer.............let me know. Thanks!! Bobby |
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