Posted on 09/09/2016 2:23:07 AM PDT by Swordmaker
Description: Well-Documented, Historic Incredibly Rare, and Desirable Ira Flanders Factory Inscribed 1 of 1,000 Winchester Model 1873 Lever Action Rifle with Factory Letter, and Winchester Advertisement History Relating to Owner
There were actually only 133 Model 1873 1 of 1,000 rifles manufactured by Winchester, and according to "Winchester's New Model of 1873: A Tribute Vol. 2" by James Gordon only 63 were uncovered for their survey.
This particularly rifle is noted on page 460 in their list of personal inscriptions by serial number and notes "I Flanders:" and "One of a Thousand." The personalized inscription is pictured on page 462. On page 382, the 1 of 1,000 marking is pictured, and the rifle is briefly discussed. It is also pictured and discussed in R. L. Wilson's "Winchester: The Golden Age of American Gunmaking and the Winchester 1 of 1000" on page 64. Based on the factory records surveyed by Gordon and Wilson, this rifle was the 9th 1 of 1,000 built and is one of only nine whose stock is not mentioned in the ledgers. All 1 of 1,000s were based on barrels selected as the best out of each thousand produced and received extra attention in fit and finishing.
The factory letter confirms this rifle shipped on May 10, 1875, with the following features: rifle, 28 inch octagon barrel, set trigger, short magazine, "1 Of 1000," and "I Flanders." One other gun was with it in order number 3114. All of the features mentioned match the current configuration. It has "Ira Flanders" inscribed in script on the left side of the action, an unusually crude "1 of 1000" panel on the barrel at the breech (only example with this marking found), a half magazine, and a single set trigger. The dust cover is the correct early style with a checkered "thumb print" and is fitted to mortised guides in the top of the frame. The stock and forearm are smooth walnut, and the sights consist of standard German silver blade front and adjustable sporting rear sights on the barrel and a long range Vernier peep sight mounted on the upper tang.
The included documents demonstrate that Ira Proctor Flanders (1831-1915) was a Civil War veteran from Plattsburgh, New York. He served in C Company of the 16th Regiment of New York Volunteer Infantry briefly between August and December 1862 before being discharged due to disability relating to health issues commonly caused by dysentery and other ailments prevalent in the Civil War camps.
He is listed as a blacksmith on his death certificate and in Federal Census records for 1870. In "Forest and Stream" Volume 7 from 1876 on page 128 is a Winchester advertisement which includes a target shot off-hand at 400 yards by Flanders in Saranac, New York, near Plattsburgh in July of 1875 with 8 bullseyes and two shots in the second ring in. The target was almost certainly shot with this very rifle given the shipping date on the letter and the renowned accuracy of the 1 of 1,000 rifles.
Included with the lot is an oval sepia-tone portrait of a young man in an early 20th century military uniform with "163" one the shoulders.
The patinated metal surfaces have light pitting overall. The markings and name inscription are crisp, but the 1 of 1,000 mark is somewhat obscure. The revarnished wood is fair and has a hairline crack along the top left of the forearm, a crack in the front of the forearm, various scratches, and some small dents. The action and set trigger function very well.
This is a unique opportunity to get your hands on a very well documented Winchester Model 1873 1 of 1,000 lever action rifle with unique inscription and unusual 1 of 1,000 marking.
The Browning 1910/55 .380 is my favorite as far as a collector’s piece is concerned. The original 1910 .380 fielded by Gavrilo Princip was responsible for far more deaths than the Winchester 1873. History...
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I inherited an 1884 Springfield (Trapdoor) rifle that had been decommissioned by the factory by a gouge taken out in the chamber. The rifle was decommissioned due to a large bore defect, and although it’s in mint condition, didn’t sell online at $1200. It would make an expensive lamp, so, is it feasible to have a gunsmith convert the chamber to the much-milder .44WCF caliber?
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I’ve done a fair amount of machining and I think it would be possible to make a chamber insert similar to those used to convert a 30:06 to .308.
The one from the Jimmy Stewart movie sold for $37,500 back in 2005.
http://www.truewestmagazine.com/winchester-73-take-two/
Depending on where the chamber gouge is located, you may be able to “shorten” it with an insert (.45 Colt would be another candidate). If the gouge is near the chamber throat, it may be possible to bore out the entire length of the original barrel and install a rifled liner in an appropriate caliber. Either way, it deserves to be more than a wall-hanger.
We had an neighbor years ago who had an old Revolutionary War flintlock turned into a lamp. It sickens me today but hillbillies had no idea of the historical value of anything like that.
The wires for the lamp went in the drilled out touch hole and up inside the barrel.
Sprouts Legs,,,
Yup!
With Rock Hudson playing an Indian, LOL!
Thanks!
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To Read Later
I had two of the 1873s many years ago. One was a rifle in 38-40. Nice, but it blew the cartridge shoulder forward about 3/16 of an inch and split all the casings. That was in 1969 and you can imagine what those shells cost!
Then I read that the 38-40 was bored deep on purpose to split the case so you could not reload.
The second was a rusted 44-40 carbine found chinked inside the walls of an old log cabin being torn down. I always wondered why that gun was hidden in such a manner!
I wish I still had both of them as the 1873 is still the most snazzy rifle I have ever seen!
Why Winchester went from the steel curved buttplate to the ugly shotgun style in later 1894s is something I will never understand.
I was somewhat partial to the ratlin gun
Let me guess. A brain dead liberal.
Fantastic. I shall cherish my collection.
Major thanks!
Maybe the estate of Jimmy Stewart has a couple.
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