aarondhgraham
New member
I knew it had to happen sooner or later,,,
A college grad I gave a rifle to,,,
Pawned it and I found it.
It's been a couple of months now,,,
I'm ready to share a story.
A few years back I bought an old .22 Bolt action single shot rifle for $25.00,,,
It was a J. C. Penny house brand and was extremely precise,,,
I did nothing to it and was hitting clays at 100 yards,,,
Shooting off of a bench of course.
According to the people I bought it from,,,
It had been in a closet at grandpa's house forever,,,
It was very obvious that the rifle not been wiped down in years.
The stock was in dismal condition,,,
Not gouged but covered with small "road rash" marks.
Anyways there was this college kid I worked with,,,
We went shooting on many occasions,,,
He would shoot the J. C. Penny,,,
I shot my Henry Acu Bolt.
He really liked shooting that rifle,,,
And became quite good with it.
So, I made it a project gun,,,
I scraped and refinished the stock,,,
And did a decent cold re-blue on the barrel.
When I was done I was very proud of the job,,,
It didn't look brand new but did turn out not looking bad at all.
I bought a nice Plano case for it and lined it with plush green velvet,,,
I made "cutouts" for the rifle, earmuffs, glasses, and ammo,,,
I even included a nice cleaning rod with brushes/mops.
Last but not least I handwrote a letter to him on real vellum,,,
The letter was the transfer bill and a small essay on our 2-year friendship.
A while back I was browsing the rifle stacks of a pawn shop in the next town over,,,
Guess what I saw standing in the rack of used rifles,,,
That very J. C. Penny rifle in all of it's glory.
The pawn broker was a bit surprised when I asked if it came with a case,,,
He pointed to the tag which read,,,
"Includes case and accessories."
I felt like I had been punched in the gut,,,
The broker didn't seem to believe me when I told him the story,,,
So I asked him to pull the butt plate where I had written, "To ******* from Aarond - OSU Graduation 2011".
My friend had used it as a trade-in,,,
For a S&W AR style .22 rifle.
The broker seemed somewhat sympathetic,,,
But wouldn't come down off of the $175.00 price he had on it.
I left it standing in the rack and went and had a couple of despondent beers,,,
It won't stop me from giving guns as graduation gifts in the future,,,
But if I ever see ******* again I don't know what I will say.
I'm not mad at *******,,,
Just somewhat hurt in my heart,,,
When one gives a gift it should be unconditional,,,
But I surely never thought he would pawn it away like he did.
We had talked about how he would teach his future son to shoot with it.
Oh well,,,
I'll get over it,,,
It just hit me a bit hard is all.
Aarond
.
A college grad I gave a rifle to,,,
Pawned it and I found it.
It's been a couple of months now,,,
I'm ready to share a story.
A few years back I bought an old .22 Bolt action single shot rifle for $25.00,,,
It was a J. C. Penny house brand and was extremely precise,,,
I did nothing to it and was hitting clays at 100 yards,,,
Shooting off of a bench of course.
According to the people I bought it from,,,
It had been in a closet at grandpa's house forever,,,
It was very obvious that the rifle not been wiped down in years.
The stock was in dismal condition,,,
Not gouged but covered with small "road rash" marks.
Anyways there was this college kid I worked with,,,
We went shooting on many occasions,,,
He would shoot the J. C. Penny,,,
I shot my Henry Acu Bolt.
He really liked shooting that rifle,,,
And became quite good with it.
So, I made it a project gun,,,
I scraped and refinished the stock,,,
And did a decent cold re-blue on the barrel.
When I was done I was very proud of the job,,,
It didn't look brand new but did turn out not looking bad at all.
I bought a nice Plano case for it and lined it with plush green velvet,,,
I made "cutouts" for the rifle, earmuffs, glasses, and ammo,,,
I even included a nice cleaning rod with brushes/mops.
Last but not least I handwrote a letter to him on real vellum,,,
The letter was the transfer bill and a small essay on our 2-year friendship.
A while back I was browsing the rifle stacks of a pawn shop in the next town over,,,
Guess what I saw standing in the rack of used rifles,,,
That very J. C. Penny rifle in all of it's glory.
The pawn broker was a bit surprised when I asked if it came with a case,,,
He pointed to the tag which read,,,
"Includes case and accessories."
I felt like I had been punched in the gut,,,
The broker didn't seem to believe me when I told him the story,,,
So I asked him to pull the butt plate where I had written, "To ******* from Aarond - OSU Graduation 2011".
My friend had used it as a trade-in,,,
For a S&W AR style .22 rifle.
The broker seemed somewhat sympathetic,,,
But wouldn't come down off of the $175.00 price he had on it.
I left it standing in the rack and went and had a couple of despondent beers,,,
It won't stop me from giving guns as graduation gifts in the future,,,
But if I ever see ******* again I don't know what I will say.
I'm not mad at *******,,,
Just somewhat hurt in my heart,,,
When one gives a gift it should be unconditional,,,
But I surely never thought he would pawn it away like he did.
We had talked about how he would teach his future son to shoot with it.
Oh well,,,
I'll get over it,,,
It just hit me a bit hard is all.
Aarond
.