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#23 | |||||||
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#24 | ||||||
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If you Google 'ATF seized property wall street journal' you will learn all about it.
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#25 | ||||||
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A friend who was in the Coast Guard told me of, under orders, taking a bandsaw to a few Parkers and tossing them in the drink when the Coasties swapped from them to some newer pump guns for their recreational shooting off the fantail of the ship....
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Two years ago at Hausmann's I was having ear protectors fitted by a guy who also dealt in walnut stocks. He said he had literally hundreds of stocks he was able to save when he took an industrial chop saw to the loads of "turn in" and confiscated guns brought to him by the police to destroy. He told me he would cut them (assembled) in half about an inch or so forward of the standing breech. The cops let him have the wood but the metal was to be scrapped. He said he was forced, by contract, to destroy some of the finest old SXS shotguns he has ever seen.... among other clunkers and wall-hangers.
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#27 | ||||||
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I hope to goodness that fate never becomes law! I do not think I would go along with it! What did Charlton Heston say? As to numbers of Parkers surviving, I do not know and am just guessing, but it would be nice to poll all members as to the number of guns in each gauge they have. I think we as a group would be a pretty good representation of surviving guns, what do you think?
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The Following User Says Thank You to Gary Carmichael Sr For Your Post: |
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#28 | ||||||
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Garry , I have no idea what the answer is to your question, but it seems that we don't go very long before some new Parker pops up. Anecdotally, when we show Parkers at places like the Pheasant Fest or the NRA Convention, it is common that some visitor to the booth will mention that they have a Parker at home. They are not a PGCA member, not what I would call a gun person, just an ordinary hunter. Its usually a V grade 12ga but you hear stories about it being a small bore and lots of engraving. We refer them to the PGCA website for identification and some follow up and some don't.
And as Mike indicated below, we are far removed out here on the Big Windy from Parkerdom. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bruce Day For Your Post: |
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#29 | ||||||
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I field trial with an old VH 12 with 30" barrels, an inappropriate pad, sling swivels, sling. There is no finish left, stock, case color, or blue. You can tell it once had checkering though. The wood is beat up, double triggers, 3" DAH etc... On a good day I could get $500 from a drunken sailor who wasn't too bright in the first place. But many many times during a field trial people have walked up and said in a hallowed tone of voice "Is that a Parker?" The cache is still there seventy years after the last one was made. Based on my experience I think more than half have survived. And as far as Parkers go, I am out in the boonies.
Best, Mike |
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#30 | ||||||
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Ed Muderlak had pondered the same thing several years ago. He did a little bit of research using the guns sold annually as tabulated by Roy Eckrose and some other sources. He covers this in chapter 43, "What are the chances" if his book "Parker Guns, Shooting Flying and the American Experience."
EDM's conclusion; "Expensive high grade Parkers were pampered and preserved, knockabouts were ridden hard and put away wet, suffering disproportionate attrition." "Parker Brothers and Remington made more than 46 times as many knockabouts (Trojan and V grade) than Parker Story grade (C and up) ; yet knockabouts are less than four times as prevalent as higher grades, according to sales data." "One way to rationalize this disparity - 31 of 2400 (Parker Story Grade) versus 119 of 112,000 - is to conclude that Trojan and Vulcan survivorship is less than 10% of grades C and above." I will venture that if survivorship of Trojan and V grade is low, survivorship of composite barrel guns is even lower. |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Pete Lester For Your Post: |
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