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04-05-2013, 10:52 PM | #83 | ||||||
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Lost Parker barrels 87131 They will be Bernard and thirty inches in length. 30"
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The Following User Says Thank You to Robert Dillon For Your Post: |
04-06-2013, 10:20 AM | #84 | ||||||
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David and Dean, the "authors" put a note in the Grade 1 section about Laminated Steel barrels listed in the stock books as PT grade. In the Grade 1 20 gauge Twist section, they noted that 20 twenty gauge Laminated Steel guns were listed as PT but noted in the stock books as having Laminated Steel barrels. I found this note after adding one of these Laminated Steel guns to my collection a few years ago. My gun is an all original very early 20 gauge in the 70s, a sweet gun with pits in the bores. The rib legend is "Laminated Steel".
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
04-06-2013, 10:44 AM | #85 | ||||||
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Thanks Bill - that's some good detective work.
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04-06-2013, 11:14 AM | #86 | ||||||
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You must mean in the 70000 serial number range and not 1870. Thanks for the imput. Dave
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04-06-2013, 11:17 AM | #87 | ||||||
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Right, there were no hammerless Parkers in the 1870's.
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04-06-2013, 01:06 PM | #88 | ||||||
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Yes, my little baby is in the 70,000 series, made in 1892. According to the SB, it is a real early hammerless 20. 71,179 was ordered January 15, 1892 by Salem G. LeValley in Buffalo, NY. It is a PH 20, 28" barrels bored full and full. By 1915, it was in Salisbury, MD and was sent back for a restock. It was still in Maryland when I found it. LeValley was a gun and sporting goods dealer in Buffalo, died in 1903 at age 61.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
04-06-2013, 01:13 PM | #89 | ||||||
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Bill and Dean, You guys are obviously in an area where more parkers exist then I am. And you also have a lot more time involved. So, how often do you see a hammerless laminated gun? Looking in the serialization book shows very few small bore laminated of any type parker. Dave
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04-06-2013, 06:11 PM | #90 | ||||||
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This is the first one I have ever seen, smallbore or not smallbore. No one is in a hotbed of Parkers unless they use the internet or go to some good gun shows. You have to get out there.
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