I'm the best at rdr 1 on ps3 or consider a top-tier player I swear, but my actions speak louder than words. My user name is xbabyimreadyx, add me if you like playing rdr and let me know you found me through Hikok45 because I'll have your back vs bullies in this game
I've got a 94 winchester. It was my great grandpa's and my great grandma (in her own words) saved up two months of grocery money to buy it in 1956 from sears. From my research I imagined she paid $100
@@TomKirkemo-l5cmost guns in that era would pack quite a wallop while keeping it's reliability, even after all these years. First firearm I bought was a Charter Arms Bulldog, found the first iteration of that revolver from the 70s. Really reliable .44 special without having to spend a Smith & Wesson price
@@iron_rush_theater1246 I had to check. Between my father and me we have three Krags. This one I have here is actually stamped with "1944", but it is 6,5. Then I don't know what the 1908 actually is chambered in, it migth be in another gunsafe.
By then there were some bolt action rifles that fired a bit more potent round and reached out a bit more (mostly because they did not have to be round nose like the 30-30) but it was not that much more and the 30-30 really was a lot more handy.
@@doranmaxwell1755there rifles chambered in some much more substantial rounds than .30-30 in 1908. .30-30 is actually closer to 7.62x39 rather than any full powered rifle round like what various militaries at the time used.
@@baneofbanes Thank you. I was aware of course of the various Euro 'African' rifles and such I think the 30-30 is a bit under rated tho. Maybe somewhere between the 7.62x39 and the 303
@@doranmaxwell1755 it’s closer to 7.62x39 than it is to .303. .303 and other cartridges like 8mm and 7mm Mauser are sustainably more powerful than .30-30.
@@baneofbanes yes I will admit that it is closer to the soviet round but far more versatile so far as bullet weight I have never been a huge fan of the 30-30 but in a rural setting where I did a lot of hunting I would think it would be ideal much more so than the soviet round
I have that A5 in a 16 ga with slug barrel. Sweet 16. It was my Dad's, he won it in a poker game at deer camp. Gave it to me for my 16th B Day 50 yrs ago. One of 3 I will never sell. Gorgeous piece
Familiar story, as my Dad bought a new 16-ga. A5 (full-choke, vent rib) in 1952 for my Mom who never used it, hence she gifted it to me on my 15th birthday. I took mallard ducks right along side the adults with their 3-inch 12-gauges, more in many cases to their bewilderment. On upland game however, the full choke was less than ideal under 35-yards. I gifted it to my niece. It has the same safety as shown in the video here, and is the BEST shotgun safety design I have ever seen or used.
This is one of my favorite series you do on the channel. Love the history and the sense of technology and innovations as they were in the chosen year. I have 2 of the 3 (94) and (A5).
I am from Brazil. I have a 1949 FN Browning Auto5 12GA, and a 1892 clone from Rossi chambered in 44 magnum. Great Video! If your video was “armed in 1912” I could include my 1911 .45.
My favorite gun to choose in the year 1908 is gonna be the Winchester 1897 pump / slide action shotgun because of being super fun to pump the action and the famous special slam firing mode.
The one shown in the photo is an Auto 5 An A5 is a modernized version that uses a different action and internals Browning's description of the A5 " . . .Don't be confused by the humpback receiver profile. This isn't your grandpa's Auto-5. "
This is one of my favourite series you do on the channel. Love the history and the sense of technology and innvoations as they were in the chosen year.
Damn........ that New Service is in great shape!!! Beautiful!!! Been teaching for one of those in .45 Colt for a long while. Great trio all together; and still viable today!!! Sometimes "Old" is better!!!
Thank you Hickok 45. This is one of my favorite series on your channel along with Sunday shot a round and Hickok talks. And the big game Hunt. And t woods walks. Oh ok I like them all .
Nice! I have a Waltham pocket watch from that year. I would probably have chosen the FN M1900 for a pistol, the A5 for a shotgun, and the 1903 Springfield for a rifle.
I was involved in competitive trapshooting for most of my early years, and remember that A5 Browning as a popular shotgun in the 60’s. However, it was overtaken by the Remington 1100 by the end of the decade as the go to semiautomatic. Still, it was an awesome handling firearm to wield.
hi, I just watched Strain 100. It was a silly lil thing but i actually liked it. you were the best character. they casted the guy who played you very well.
My Grandfather was serving with the Royal Northwest Mounted Police in 1908. He was permitted to use his own rifle, that he purchased in 1907 - a Winchester 94 SRC in 25-35 Win. I've been reading that a lot of "rangers" liked and used that particular setup. It resides in my bedroom now, as I'm it's temporary custodian. Thanks for the video, Hickok45!
I had an A-5 many years ago. It was made in the 1930s 28" barrel, improved- modified choke and was my favorite quail gun. Got stolen in the 1980s and never recovered. I have an 1894 rifle, 26" round barrel crescent butt plate, 30 wcf (30-30) made in 1917. It is a great rifle and very accurate marbles tang peep sight for my 61 year old eyes. Great guns
Do you mean Buds Gun Shop or Buds Beer Shop? Ha ha...these TH-cam rules are ridiculous. Clowns are at the controls. I sold my Goog shares weeks ago. Probably a good move
Howdy Greg,,John,, Love my 1894s and A5s and Remington model 11s,,,old but fantastic!!! And one Savage model of same!! Thanks again Brothers and keep forging forward with awesome and great tools of the past!! Such great tools!! Love from SW Ohio,,Germantown,,Brother Neil
My Grandfather was born in 1892. His favorite uncle was a Civil War vet! I went with him to the farm where he lived in about 1900 and he described how they would harvest wheat by hand with scythes.
Information is vastly transmitted on what we call today, "Online" .. i mean who believes that there is some massive emporium of information being traded using clay tablets or quill scribbled paper? Its 99.9999 percent, Online.
And I say that because, they are effectively weaponizing emerging ai algorithms to comb through and very much so take your ability to speak away. What was is it that ppl like ol Susan and crew were saying just a couple years back? Freedom of speech but "Not freedom of reach" ? ... basically like locking us into cells and saying "there yell all you want to in there" .... very very sick people. And people as a whole need to start realizing whats going on.
I’m still carrying that basic set up. Although the wheel gun is .357 and the shotgun a pump action. I might be convinced to trade a spare body part for that pistol if you need one.
I would second this. New firearms are great and all, but they are fairly charmless and uninteresting at this point. Seen one polymer striker fired 9mm, seen em all I’m afraid.
I still have my Winchester 94 in 30-30! That my dad bought new for my 15th birthday in 1974 & it still works like a new one! I am also a fan of my 1873 Uberti Cattlemen! Guns of the 19th century design are still some of the best in the 21st century! I wish I had that Browning shotgun; but I'll just have to use my old High standard 12 gauge pump.
What a beautiful Auto-5 the wood, the engravings and golden trigger it's beautiful.But for a handgun a would choose a Mauser C96 semiautomatic,10 rounds stripper clips and the design make the pistol great.
Oh I just realized that the cowardly character, Beni, from the 1999 film, The Mummy, used a Colt New Service revolver chambered in 45ACP. No wonder it looks familiar!! It's a movie I recently viewed again this year on DVD in a trilogy set since last watching them the 2000's.
Spihk Heartbust!? Bozeman Hotmail Recipient asked Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad if Bozeman Hotmail Recipient dad needed payment for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad's tires that Bozeman Hotmail Recipient destroyed but Bozeman Hotmail Recipient dad said no!?
I have a Winchester model 92 in 32-20 circa 1902. Also an S&W 32 hand ejector in 32-20 again circa 1902. This variant was only in production in 1902 and 1903 if I read the history correctly. I've also read that S&W didn't begin to harden the cylinders on the hand ejector/M&P series until sometime after 1915. So it's a display queen. As these were family hand me downs, by definition that what I would have had. I don't have a shotgun from that era, but at the time I would have chosen the Winchester model 97 in 12 gauge for its versatility. I did have a model 12 (same basic action as the 97 in a cleaned up form factor) that I stupidly traded away for some audio gear.
Several of of the lawmen carried Remington Model 8 semi-automatic rifles when they stopped Bonnie and Clyde's outlaw careers, including legendary Texas Ranger Frank Hamer. The Remington Model 8, designed by John Browning, was introduced in 1905.
🇨🇱🤝🇺🇸saludos mr hickock45 excelente muestra de armas de 1908 todas son una leyenda especialmente la escopeta browning extrañe al rifle springfield 1903 que para 1908 llevaba un par de años de servicio en el us armyfelicitaciones por el video un gran saludo desde chile 🤗🤗
For 123 years old, you don’t look a day over 95 @hickok45! 😂. Just joking, love that Colt New Service with those vintage black grips. And the shape of that bluing! Truly a gun that will last a lifetime if you take care of it!
I inherited my Dads Winchester 32 win. spl. All my other lever guns are 30/30s. The .32 has a tad more power but they are both great deep woods deer rounds.
Yup...I get so mad at the folks who say these weapons obsolete, when it is obvious they are functioning just fine...especially the '94, still maybe the Best option for deer east of the Mississippi...
The John Marston Loadout
I imagine he would still use his Colt SAA or the Schofield that Landon Ricketts gave him.
@@Sandblstr John definitely would seeing how Jack at least keeps his SAA in the epilogue of RDR1
Yep, that's what I though too.
I’m replaying rdr after replaying rdr2 cause I saw it got remastered. Came here to comment the same thing
I'm the best at rdr 1 on ps3 or consider a top-tier player I swear, but my actions speak louder than words.
My user name is xbabyimreadyx, add me if you like playing rdr and let me know you found me through Hikok45 because I'll have your back vs bullies in this game
I've got a 94 winchester. It was my great grandpa's and my great grandma (in her own words) saved up two months of grocery money to buy it in 1956 from sears. From my research I imagined she paid $100
That’s awesome. I have my great grandpas 94 from 1941. Still looks brand new
Shoulda got the TommyGun FA instead in the catalog lol
What's crazy is it's 80 times cheaper to make and produce these firearms today and yet the prices are 10 times as high as they were in the fifties.
These throwbacks to an earlier era bring this 70 year old back to the guns of my dad when I was a budding 12 year old gun nut. I love those memories.
I actually have a rifle from 1908, a "Krag-Jørgensen" (I'm Norwegian, it's a Norwegian rifle, that's how we write it ;) ) in 6,5.
That's super cool.
@@no-barknoonan8798 I also have aGerman Mauser from 1938 in 30-06, come to think about it. Besides a shotgun I don't have any guns made after 1965. :D
@@TomKirkemo-l5cmost guns in that era would pack quite a wallop while keeping it's reliability, even after all these years. First firearm I bought was a Charter Arms Bulldog, found the first iteration of that revolver from the 70s. Really reliable .44 special without having to spend a Smith & Wesson price
What? Not in 30-40 Krag?
@@iron_rush_theater1246 I had to check. Between my father and me we have three Krags. This one I have here is actually stamped with "1944", but it is 6,5. Then I don't know what the 1908 actually is chambered in, it migth be in another gunsafe.
Wow that 30-30 really impressed me.
By then there were some bolt action rifles that fired a bit more potent round and reached out a bit more (mostly because they did not have to be round nose like the 30-30) but it was not that much more and the 30-30 really was a lot more handy.
@@doranmaxwell1755there rifles chambered in some much more substantial rounds than .30-30 in 1908. .30-30 is actually closer to 7.62x39 rather than any full powered rifle round like what various militaries at the time used.
@@baneofbanes Thank you. I was aware of course of the various Euro 'African' rifles and such I think the 30-30 is a bit under rated tho. Maybe somewhere between the 7.62x39 and the 303
@@doranmaxwell1755 it’s closer to 7.62x39 than it is to .303. .303 and other cartridges like 8mm and 7mm Mauser are sustainably more powerful than .30-30.
@@baneofbanes yes I will admit that it is closer to the soviet round but far more versatile so far as bullet weight I have never been a huge fan of the 30-30 but in a rural setting where I did a lot of hunting I would think it would be ideal much more so than the soviet round
I love the old early and pre 1900s guns, they bring a smile to my face!
I would love to own a 1903 Springfield. Remember when they were affordable surplus rifles...
It's impressive how these classics set the standard for reliability and firepower back then.
I have that A5 in a 16 ga with slug barrel. Sweet 16. It was my Dad's, he won it in a poker game at deer camp. Gave it to me for my 16th B Day 50 yrs ago. One of 3 I will never sell. Gorgeous piece
Familiar story, as my Dad bought a new 16-ga. A5 (full-choke, vent rib) in 1952 for my Mom who never used it, hence she gifted it to me on my 15th birthday. I took mallard ducks right along side the adults with their 3-inch 12-gauges, more in many cases to their bewilderment. On upland game however, the full choke was less than ideal under 35-yards.
I gifted it to my niece. It has the same safety as shown in the video here, and is the BEST shotgun safety design I have ever seen or used.
I have a Model 1894 from 1904 I inherited from my grandpa. Chambered in 32 Winchester special with an octagonal barrel. Still a tack driver.
Honestly one of my msot favorite series on this channel and great choices for this 'Armed in.'
This is one of my favorite series you do on the channel. Love the history and the sense of technology and innovations as they were in the chosen year. I have 2 of the 3 (94) and (A5).
I am from Brazil. I have a 1949 FN Browning Auto5 12GA, and a 1892 clone from Rossi chambered in 44 magnum. Great Video! If your video was “armed in 1912” I could include my 1911 .45.
The browning a5 can actually load the first shell straight through the tube and into the chamber
(Speed load)
It's a John Browning patent 👍
Lot of people here in Ohio still use a A-5 slug gun for deer season. As Hickok45 shows, it can definitely reach out there to reasonable ranges.
My favorite gun to choose in the year 1908 is gonna be the Winchester 1897 pump / slide action shotgun because of being super fun to pump the action and the famous special slam firing mode.
Love the A5 Browning!
Love my A5, but it's so dirty.
@@Dularr ,that's fixable..
The one shown in the photo
is an Auto 5
An A5 is a modernized version
that uses a different action
and internals
Browning's description of the A5
" . . .Don't be confused by the
humpback receiver profile.
This isn't your grandpa's
Auto-5. "
@@maxpinson5002,I just used the shorter term...perhaps incorrectly, but the one that I was thinking of was once my uncle's..bought in 1956..
This is one of my favourite series you do on the channel. Love the history and the sense of technology and innvoations as they were in the chosen year.
Hickok 45 is the goat
The uncle/grandfather everybody should have.
I'm going with Annie Oakley.
@@crackoamerican5318 👍
@@crackoamerican5318shut up
The model 94 will always be the choice. Great video sir.
So sorry for the issue with having to reupload all those videos 🥴 I sure enjoy(ed) all of them without that trouble👍
Damn........ that New Service is in great shape!!! Beautiful!!! Been teaching for one of those in .45 Colt for a long while. Great trio all together; and still viable today!!! Sometimes "Old" is better!!!
The perfect combo back in the day and even today! Thanks Fellers!
Great I can know how to arm myself as John Marston properly
well actually, those are Jim Miltons guns.
Thank you Hickok 45. This is one of my favorite series on your channel along with Sunday shot a round and Hickok talks. And the big game Hunt. And t woods walks. Oh ok I like them all .
Nice! I have a Waltham pocket watch from that year. I would probably have chosen the FN M1900 for a pistol, the A5 for a shotgun, and the 1903 Springfield for a rifle.
👍
Makes me drool to look at those 3 classics together side by side!
I wont say I watch all of your videos But every time I come by to see what you got cocking you allways put a smile on my face, most holesome videos
Until 1989 when I bought my first AR and my first Glock 19, that's all I had plus a Winchester .22lr lever gun. And I still have all four.
I love these period era loadout videos!
All 3 are excellent choices. If I was a Mountie in 1909 I would have been carrying the Colt with 5 1/2 inch Barrell.
I’ve been watching a lot of old revolutionary firearms like the DB or the pump, awesome to see this come up 😂
I was involved in competitive trapshooting for most of my early years, and remember that A5 Browning as a popular shotgun in the 60’s. However, it was overtaken by the Remington 1100 by the end of the decade as the go to semiautomatic. Still, it was an awesome handling firearm to wield.
Thanks hickok 45
I have made a lotta good choices on firearms from ur reviews
hi, I just watched Strain 100. It was a silly lil thing but i actually liked it. you were the best character. they casted the guy who played you very well.
My Grandfather was serving with the Royal Northwest Mounted Police in 1908. He was permitted to use his own rifle, that he purchased in 1907 - a Winchester 94 SRC in 25-35 Win. I've been reading that a lot of "rangers" liked and used that particular setup. It resides in my bedroom now, as I'm it's temporary custodian. Thanks for the video, Hickok45!
I had an A-5 many years ago.
It was made in the 1930s 28" barrel, improved- modified choke and was my favorite quail gun.
Got stolen in the 1980s and never recovered.
I have an 1894 rifle, 26" round barrel crescent butt plate, 30 wcf (30-30) made in 1917.
It is a great rifle and very accurate marbles tang peep sight for my 61 year old eyes.
Great guns
I order from Bud's online all the time. Thanks to Hickok 45 I found Bud's. Nothing but good things to say about Bud's.
Do you mean Buds Gun Shop or Buds Beer Shop? Ha ha...these TH-cam rules are ridiculous. Clowns are at the controls. I sold my Goog shares weeks ago. Probably a good move
These old full metal guns are just a whole other vibe, so cool
Man that 94 is a true daisy. Beautiful sir.
Sweet three guns! 🙏🏼
I have the Hurricane. Great pistol. Had it since 1977 and still works like the day I got it.
Howdy Greg,,John,,
Love my 1894s and A5s and Remington model 11s,,,old but fantastic!!! And one Savage model of same!!
Thanks again Brothers and keep forging forward with awesome and great tools of the past!! Such great tools!!
Love from SW Ohio,,Germantown,,Brother Neil
My maternal grandfather was born in February of 1908. This gives me another reason to watch this video
My Grandfather was born in 1892. His favorite uncle was a Civil War vet! I went with him to the farm where he lived in about 1900 and he described how they would harvest wheat by hand with scythes.
I have 2 win. 94 one pre 64 and one post 64 and I love both equally they are really straight shooters and Id pick them over most guns today
ARMLESS IN 1996 UK LEST WE FORGET
Same in France...
Sorry brother, as an ex-pat I hope you can turn that around.
Going in the same way here in Brazil
Information is vastly transmitted on what we call today, "Online" .. i mean who believes that there is some massive emporium of information being traded using clay tablets or quill scribbled paper? Its 99.9999 percent, Online.
And I say that because, they are effectively weaponizing emerging ai algorithms to comb through and very much so take your ability to speak away. What was is it that ppl like ol Susan and crew were saying just a couple years back? Freedom of speech but "Not freedom of reach" ? ... basically like locking us into cells and saying "there yell all you want to in there" .... very very sick people. And people as a whole need to start realizing whats going on.
I’m still carrying that basic set up. Although the wheel gun is .357 and the shotgun a pump action.
I might be convinced to trade a spare body part for that pistol if you need one.
Look what, popped up my inbox. Thank you sirs
Colt, Browning, and Winchester…when they were all legit American-made quality. It doesn’t get better than that!
You should do more videos like this showing firearm options from different decades.. 20's.. 30's... 40's and so on.
I would second this. New firearms are great and all, but they are fairly charmless and uninteresting at this point. Seen one polymer striker fired 9mm, seen em all I’m afraid.
Hello Sir,
A while since ive tuned in. Glad to see all is well.
Long time fan.
Thanks for another great video !
I Always Love Your Videos.
Keep Them Coming!!
I watched it on rumble. Didn’t see anything that would have caused problems but what do I know?
Great episode.
I really enjoy the "Armed in" series.
Hey hickok45, I love your videos, these types where you cover what one would have during specific time period are my favorite 😊
I already have two of the three!, and a 1897 for a shot gun, life is good!.
Great video nice rifle and shotgun and 44 colt thanks for sharing Hickok45
Can anyone else feel the recoil from the shotgun just by watching the video?
Made so well and great looking I wonder if only people with money had guns for protection back then seems so
It's funny he keeps saying that he was alive in 1908 that would mean that you would be something like 116 years old
To be fair this is an older video, I'm sure he looks a lot older now
I still have my Winchester 94 in 30-30! That my dad bought new for my 15th birthday in 1974 & it still works like a new one! I am also a fan of my 1873 Uberti Cattlemen! Guns of the 19th century design are still some of the best in the 21st century! I wish I had that Browning shotgun; but I'll just have to use my old High standard 12 gauge pump.
My favorite type of video!!! Thanks
Mauser k98 for sure! love the channel gentlemen
Still very relevant today; if I'm forced to reload. These exact three are my choices.
I would love to own any or all of those guns. You could be very well armed in 1908.
Fine choice of weapons!!!
I would love him to training me . This dude knows what he is doing. The recoil on that shotgun is crazy. ❤
I have a 1909 army new service in .45 colt. Slickest trigger on anything I have but what a beast of a DA pull.
So I'd pick that+ the 1907 in .351 WSL or a Krag carbine. Not sure on the shotgun but would probably stick with one of the Remington doubles.
Thanks
Thanks!
Absolutely beautiful weapons
I think this guy would have picked a Savage model 99 for his rifle to sorta matched the two.
Great job.
I'm not sure if I have seen a savage 99 on his channel. Maybe I just don't remember? It would be nice to see one though.
The guns are cool and the joke at the end was hilarious!
Mr hickok45 sir, I still have a very very soft spot for the single shot hop up rifles they do hit hard.
Someone in 1908 would have had a lot of money with that little collection lol..really nice
What a beautiful Auto-5 the wood, the engravings and golden trigger it's beautiful.But for a handgun a would choose a Mauser C96 semiautomatic,10 rounds stripper clips and the design make the pistol great.
Oh I just realized that the cowardly character, Beni, from the 1999 film, The Mummy, used a Colt New Service revolver chambered in 45ACP. No wonder it looks familiar!! It's a movie I recently viewed again this year on DVD in a trilogy set since last watching them the 2000's.
Spihk Heartbust!? Bozeman Hotmail Recipient asked Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad if Bozeman Hotmail Recipient dad needed payment for Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad's tires that Bozeman Hotmail Recipient destroyed but Bozeman Hotmail Recipient dad said no!?
1897 trench shotgun, 1903 Springfield rifle, 1905 Browning pistol
"Our time has passed, john."
I have a Winchester model 92 in 32-20 circa 1902. Also an S&W 32 hand ejector in 32-20 again circa 1902. This variant was only in production in 1902 and 1903 if I read the history correctly. I've also read that S&W didn't begin to harden the cylinders on the hand ejector/M&P series until sometime after 1915. So it's a display queen. As these were family hand me downs, by definition that what I would have had. I don't have a shotgun from that era, but at the time I would have chosen the Winchester model 97 in 12 gauge for its versatility. I did have a model 12 (same basic action as the 97 in a cleaned up form factor) that I stupidly traded away for some audio gear.
Jim Milton's Loadout
Hello Hickok45
Sam very nice guns
Cool 👍🏼
Several of of the lawmen carried Remington Model 8 semi-automatic rifles when they stopped Bonnie and Clyde's outlaw careers, including legendary Texas Ranger Frank Hamer. The Remington Model 8, designed by John Browning, was introduced in 1905.
30-30 will always be a deer gun
might be interesting to compare 3 for 1908 with 2008
I once had an AUTO5. Belgium made. I truly miss that shotgun.
Hickok lookin like a spry young man for his 120s!
Yeah that's what's funny I keep saying that like damn he wasn't alive and no 1908
The arithmetic says he's 116 . You know what they say about brass bands !
🇨🇱🤝🇺🇸saludos mr hickock45 excelente muestra de armas de 1908 todas son una leyenda especialmente la escopeta browning extrañe al rifle springfield 1903 que para 1908 llevaba un par de años de servicio en el us armyfelicitaciones por el video un gran saludo desde chile 🤗🤗
Old guns are freaking awesome!
that old bluing is so good.
J.Browning was both a genius gunsmith and a businessman.
For 123 years old, you don’t look a day over 95 @hickok45! 😂. Just joking, love that Colt New Service with those vintage black grips. And the shape of that bluing! Truly a gun that will last a lifetime if you take care of it!
Its the Hunt: Showdown irl loadout!
My first deer rifle was my great grandfather’s 32 winchester special.
I inherited my Dads Winchester 32 win. spl. All my other lever guns are 30/30s. The .32 has a tad more power but they are both great deep woods deer rounds.
That would be three fine choices for any time.
Yup...I get so mad at the folks who say these weapons obsolete, when it is obvious they are functioning just fine...especially the '94, still maybe the Best option for deer east of the Mississippi...
The 32 special was also in the Model ‘94
It was in the 1892
@@bcb5696 , I have a model ‘94 in the 32 special, and the 30-30. Both rifles were my granddad’s
@@van7887 weird I’ve only ever found them in 30-30 and 25-35 for some reason
My father in laws grandfather brought a Browning A5 back from Belgium after one of the Great wars .
Thousands of years from now, a future civilization will think a major battle was fought on this land.
Man is showing of the Marston family heirlooms
Very nice!