I have two shotguns that have come down to me from my grandfather. They are pretty well nameless, and not very pretty. Someone referred to them, with a slightly curled lip, as Hardware Store guns.
It seems to me that these nameless Plain Janes deserve a place in our history. They put food on the table; just like the shovels and hoes that came from the hardware store. There were probably many more of these than the more famous, more expensive, guns of the era.
Has anyone ever seen a study or a history of these old guns?
Swagman
It seems to me that these nameless Plain Janes deserve a place in our history. They put food on the table; just like the shovels and hoes that came from the hardware store. There were probably many more of these than the more famous, more expensive, guns of the era.
Has anyone ever seen a study or a history of these old guns?
Swagman