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Posted By: gnoahhh A pair came home to roost - 03/20/24
Last weekend's Baltimore Antique Arms Show was a good one that yielded up a couple jewels for me.

First, a Ballard #3 Gallery rifle*, .22LR. Dates to very late 1880's shortly before Marlin quit the Ballard in favor of concentrating on lever guns. Case colors are there but patinized (but the case colors on the breech block/trigger group remain vivid inside the receiver). What's interesting is that it was lined by C.C.Johnson (laughingly speculated by the seller, Gary Quinlan, with what would appear to be a Johnson job number on the bottom flat under the fore arm. No way to know for sure). (Back in the 30's-40's there were no ready-made liners to be had. A lining job entailed making/rifling the liner before starting the project.) Bore is mint, action snaps shut as the breech block cams into position - it should shoot, and if initial backyard testing is an indicator it will. Weight 7 pounds 9 ounces, 8 pounds 4 ounces with scope. Trigger breaks at 2 3/4 lbs. I hung the 30's vintage Fecker 6x Small Game scope on it the minute I got it home.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

Second jewel is a Stevens 44, .32 Long RF. Low serial number and 7 o'clock extractor indicates late 1890's manufacture. (Stevens factory records are long since lost and exact dating is impossible.) Vivid case colors, absolutely mint bore, pristine barrel bluing, and excellent wood indicate that it spent most of the last 125 years in closets. Lyman tang sight and Beech front sight live on it. I'm not put off by the fact it's a .32 rimfire - I have a proper centerfire breech block which will be swapped in (and the RF breech block kept with the gun for posterity), a stash of .32 Long Colt brass (same dimensions as the RF case), and a cherry Ideal mould to cast a proper heeled bullet for the cartridge. It'll soon bark (ok, maybe "yip") again - the consummate backyard beer can destroyer!

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

* Gallery rifle doesn't mean it was intended for carnival gallery shooting (although I would assume some were used for that purpose). In the time period before WWI Gallery shooting was the name given to recreational/competition shooting held indoors at 75 foot distance. Galleries were to be found in every major city and were hugely popular, especially for off-season "keeping tuned" shooting.
They sure are pretty. I bet the pennies paid were pretty too!
Very nice my friend! Sounds like it was a Great show. This weekend probly the best show in northern Michigan, the Gaylord show. Going with a couple old buds!
Treasures!
grin
Posted By: colodog Re: A pair came home to roost - 03/22/24
It took a while but they're in the right hands now!

I don't know anyone else who might have a spare breech block, appropriate cases and a bullet mold to get the Stevens out of the closet!

Congratulations!
Posted By: Mesa Re: A pair came home to roost - 03/22/24
Glad you can put that .32 back in service! And you are giving the 44 the respect it deserves and hasn't had for a long time. The Ballard can speak for itself. Good 'uns!
Posted By: Exchipy Re: A pair came home to roost - 03/23/24
Originally Posted by gnoahhh
… Stevens 44, .32 Long RF. … Vivid case colors, absolutely mint bore, pristine barrel bluing, … Lyman tang sight and Beech front sight … I have a proper centerfire breech block which will be swapped in …, a stash of .32 Long Colt brass (same dimensions as the RF case), and a cherry Ideal mould to cast a proper heeled bullet for the cartridge. It'll soon bark (ok, maybe "yip") again - the consummate backyard beer can destroyer!
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

This one, and your plans for it, certainly got my attention!

[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]

My salvaged Stevens Favorite 1915, its windage adjustable Marble Arms tang sight capable of elevation adjustment sufficient to achieve standard velocity .22LR hits on my 6” steel at 200 yards, is simply a Stevens 44 wannabe:

[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]
[Linked Image from i.postimg.cc]

But some day, maybe, if the planets align just so …
Posted By: Txtrout Re: A pair came home to roost - 03/28/24
Ok. First we are not supposed to temp our fellow man, and
I shouldn't be envious...

Lovely pair.
Posted By: zcm82 Re: A pair came home to roost - 03/28/24
Beauties 👍 That 32 should be a blast.

I feed my Henry carbine a steady diet of roughly 32RF equivalent 32S&W Long cast loads, and it is an absolute hoot. It's like shooting 22 CBs, you don't even need ear plugs. 😄

It's also a dandy little small game round for short shooting in the brush or tall grass; body shots knock rabbits and squirrels flat without tearing them to shreds.
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