|
Notices |
Welcome to the new PGCA Forum! As well, since it
is new - please read the following:
This is a new forum - so you must REGISTER to this Forum before posting;
If you are not a PGCA Member, we do not allow posts selling, offering or brokering firearms and/or parts; and
You MUST REGISTER your REAL FIRST and LAST NAME as your login name.
To register:
Click here..................
If you are registered to the forum and keep getting logged
out: Please
Click Here...
Welcome & enjoy!
To read the Posts, Messages & Threads in the PGCA Forum, you must be REGISTERED and LOGGED INTO your account! To Register, as a New User please see the Registration Link Above. If you are registered, but not Logged In, please Log in with your account Username and Password found on this page to the top right.
|
 |
|
 |
10-06-2024, 12:35 PM
|
#1
|
Member
|
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 6,614
Thanks: 3,338
Thanked 13,197 Times in 3,491 Posts
|
|
Most of G&H rifles were built on either '03 Springfield receivers, or Mauser '98 receivers. The early guns have been seen with lesser known receivers. I have had a few on Springfield receivers, and a .256 Newton on an early Model 54 Winchester receiver.
The Griffin & Howe stock is very distinguishable, and almost always with either an ebony, or horn cap. I've never seen one I didn't like.
Will Graham was the president of the famous Madison Ave. advertising agency William Estey (Phillip Morris, Campbells Soup, and many other household names). For at least 12 years, always on Christmas Eve, Will would go to A&F and commission a rifle. Every one was on a Springfield action. One at a time, he took each rifle to Africa, never firing more than one shot. Other than a few rounds sighting them in, and the one kill each, he never shot any of them again. He married for the first time, the year he died, and my dad was with him when he passed. He asked my dad to go and pick out a rifle, to remember him. After Will died, my dad told Will's wife he didn't need a gun to remember him, and that the guns should stay together. She still had 12 rifles when she passed in 1992.
|
|
|
The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to edgarspencer For Your Post:
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
10-07-2024, 10:13 AM
|
#2
|
Member
|
PGCA Lifetime Member Since Second Grade
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 16,649
Thanks: 6,839
Thanked 10,028 Times in 5,312 Posts
|
|
My most beloved gun collecting and bourbon drinking partner was Andrew J. Cummings, who died at 95 years old about ten years ago. He tells a story about Eugene Meyer, the owner of the Washington Post before the war, inviting a group of his friends, including Andrew's father, on a big game hunting trip to Canada. All these guys were bird hunters and dog handlers who hardly owned a high powered rifle among them. Mr. Meyer detoured the trip to Canada to New York so they could visit Abercrombie and Fitch. There, everyone picked out a rifle, all of which were paid for by Eugene Meyer. The Mannlicher rifle that Andrew's father picked out was still in Andrew's gun room when he died. It was a beautiful full stocked light gun, but I don't know the caliber. I don't know whether the Griffin and Howe premises was shared with Abercrombie and Fitch at that time, as it was when I first visited there in 1961 when I was 14 years old.
|
|
|
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post:
|
|
|