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View Full Version : Something for the Winchester folks.....



Scootertrash
01-17-2015, 09:09 AM
and those who just like a cool story:

http://www.nps.gov/morningreport/?date=01%2F12%2F2015&as_sfid=AAAAAAWJrYeW8KxqHXSN1bdB8aKyJ5i7nPmhT5m-JVk8Dqrf27zxBJ8UjW2d8D4_jAPrjIxPW1u8rmt8cyfEcDS-fZk1FR5umBCAGWu9DK1o837NdQ%3D%3D&as_fid=G2TVu02K0TwRMsUvv2nk

Fakebook link for pics:

https://www.facebook.com/GreatBasinNPS

Great Basin National Park (NV)
Historic Rifle Found Still Propped Against Tree

“Why would you leave your rifle and not come back?”

Numerous questions such as that one surround the small piece of American heritage found and recovered by Great Basin National Park archaeologists in November.

A 132-year-old Winchester rifle, exposed for all those years to sun, wind, snow and rain, was found leaning against a tree in the park. The cracked wood stock, weathered to grey, and the brown rusted barrel blended into the colors of the old juniper tree in a remote rocky outcrop, keeping the rifle hidden for many years.

Engraved on the rifle is “Model 1873,” identifying it distinctly as a Winchester Model 1873 repeating rifle. The serial number on the lower tang corresponds in Winchester records held at the Center for the West at the Cody Firearms Museum in Cody, Wyoming, with a manufacture and shipping date of 1882. But the detailed history of this rifle is as yet unknown. Winchester records do not indicate who purchased the rifle from the warehouse or where it was shipped.

Winchester Model 1873 rifles hold a prominent place in Western history and lore. The rifles are referred to as “the gun that won the West”. A total of 720,610 were manufactured between 1873 and 1916, when production ended. In 1882 alone, over 25,000 were made.

Selling for about $50 when they first came out, the rifles were reduced in price to $25 in 1882 and were accessible and popular as “everyman’s” rifle. The Winchester business plan included selling large lots of rifles to dealers or “jobbers” who would distribute the firearms to smaller sales outlets.

This rifle may provide its own bit of lore. Mysteries of the rifle’s journey through time spur creative and lively discussion: Who left the rifle? When and why it was leaned against the tree? And, why was it never retrieved?

The Great Basin cultural resource staff is continuing research in old newspapers and family histories, hoping to resolve some of the mystery and fill in details about the story of this rifle.

The park will provide a viewing opportunity for the community before sending the rifle to conservators to stabilize the wood and apply museum conservation techniques. The treatment will keep the gun looking as it was found and prevent further deterioration.

When the rifle is returned to the park, it will be displayed as part of the park’s 30th birthday and the NPS centennial celebration.

[Submitted by Nichole Andler, Chief of Interpretation]


ETA: They dated the serial number. It was sold at retail in 1882. So it's a damned old rifle.

El Camexican
01-17-2015, 10:24 AM
The only time I ever leave a rifle against a tree in the woods is to take a poop. I'm thinking a bear or cougar may have a had a tasty meal that day that didn't involve having to remove a pair of pants to get at the rear quarters, but then again we can never be 100% certain that it wasn't...

Scootertrash
01-17-2015, 11:25 AM
I did a little more reading and found a post on FB that said the rifle was not loaded.

RIDE-RED 250r
01-17-2015, 11:47 AM
Very interesting story!

Just like old houses, how many times have you seen an old firearm and wish it could talk......

Along those same lines of wishing it could talk, my brother in law has an old Springfield Armory Trapdoor rifle that by the serial number is confirmed to have been issued to Custer's troops! Being that it is a surviving, fireable specimen, you have to think it was picked up by one of the Sioux and used for a time afterward...

El Camexican
01-17-2015, 09:50 PM
I did a little more reading and found a post on FB that said the rifle was not loaded.

That might explain what happened to the owner. I wonder if anyone has taken a metal detector to the area?