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Would like to gain a better understanding of SD&G's sale of this gun, one model of which was a hammerless sidelocker probably made by Sauer, or perhaps Schiller or Heinrich Lindner. A partial table of contents for SD&G's 1892 catalog lists guns by Manhattan Arms as included. A SD&G 1905 catalog's table of contents does not list Manhattan Arms guns, but does note Sauer guns as included. Cornell Publishing offers these catalogs, but I have not had an opportunity yet to study their contents.
THe SD&G firm was reorganized in 1875 under the stated name and operated until 1939. Were Manhattan-named double guns offered before 1892? Were boxlock Manhattan Arms guns also offered? Is serial number/year of production related data available for Manhattan double guns? Were 16 gauge Manhattan Arms guns offered?
Did SD&G offer sidelock model Sauer made hammerless guns, as well as the firm's boxlocks?
On a related note, one data source I accessed noted that Lefever made guns for SD&G during this period. Were such guns Lefever's sideplate guns? Were they marked with the Schoverling Daly and Gales firm name?
All help appreciated.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Outdoorlvr,
I'm on travel and away from my reference material. I'll do some digging later in the week and see what I can discover in the older SD&G material on Manhattan Arms that might answer some of your questions.
A couple quick thoughts -
On the Lefever question - SD&G had Daly guns built on the Lefever 1880 sidecocker patent but all the Daly sidecockers I have seen appear to have been made overseas using that patent. I'm not aware of any Lefever built guns bearing the Charles Daly or SD&G name.
I would cut off 10 years from the SD&G tenure (late 1920s vice late 1930s). A series of reorganizations/sales kept the firm going past the late 1920s but technically it was no longer SD&G. Kinckerbocker was added to the name and short time later KSD&G was dead and Charles Daly, Inc. was born. I know I'm nitpicking here.
More to follow,
Ken
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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I have a drilling (three barrel, 12 x 12 x 9.3x7.2) with Manhattan Arms Company stamped on the lockplates. Has fine 29 1/2-in damascus barrels, Italian walnut stock, external hammers, top lever, and sidelever that opens the breech. Locks up tight like a bank vault. Light scroll work, excellent workmanship. A close look at the proof marks tells you it was made by JP Sauer and Sohns in Germany with a serial number that dates it at 1883. On the ebony buttplate is the initials (logo) for Schoverling, Gales & Daly. This firm imported firearms from Europe at the Chamber Street address in New York. In the past few years I've seen a few Manhattan Arms Company shotguns (hammerless) at the local antique gun shows.
By the way, the stock is about 2 inches short for a proper fit (about 13 inch LOP). Does anyone know a decent gunsmith in the Detroit-metro area where I can look into a wood extension. Tried a add-on pad, still too short.
Thanks,
MikeF
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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My Father had a Damascus barrel 10-gauge boxlock hammerless double briefly that was marked Manhatten Arms Co. From what I remember it looked like a typical Birmingham trade gun. By the 1912 SD&G catalogue the hammerless boxlock gun being sold under the Manhatten Arms Co. name was a Hunter Arms Co. Fulton.
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Ken and Mike
Could it be that Mike's 1883 drilling was built on the Lefever @1880 patent?
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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This is beginning to sound pretty incestuous. Early on SD&G was located and 84 & 86 Chamber Street, NY - I'm going to guess this is the street number on the Manhattan Arms gun if it is marked with any numbers. Every Charles Daly drilling I have ever seen has been made by Sauer. I'd be curious to sit a Daly drilling alongside a Manhattan Arms drilling. I got a feeling they'd be identical except for some letter stamps. So was Manhattan Arms just another SD&G trade name (a la "Charles Daly").
I need access to my references but I'd like to check when Manhattan arms drillings dissappear from the SD&G catalogs and the retailing of Charles Daly drillings begin?
Ken
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To continue this little sidebar a bit - - What would have been the obligation of Sauer, for instance, to have shown a European/Prussian patent related to Lefever on a Sauer made Daly? - -Or, some other achnowledgment of Lefever involvment? Any suggestive markings on your drilling, Mike?
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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In Bob Elliot's book he pictures an I grade Lefever with the SD&G mark. These guns appear to be identical to the DS, but were no listed in the LAC catalogs. Bob surmises that most of them may have been sold through SD&G. These were introduced ca 1900. Miller
Miller/TN I Didn't Say Everything I Said, Yogi Berra
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Ken - you're right about the trade name. I went to my reference books (Carder) and it says, Manhattan Arms Co was a trade name used on hammer and hammerless side by side imported by Schoverling, Daly and Gales, and also, Von Lenggerke & Detmold, both of New York city. The guns were made in Belguim by Neumann Freres and Fabrique d'Armes Fs. Dumoulin & Co., and in Germany by J.P. Sauer. The 1887 Merwin Hulbert & Co. catalog featured the hammer gun $25.65 to $37.50 and the hammerless gun for $68.00 for a 12 gauge, and $72.00 for a 10 gauge. Choice of barrels were in twist, laminated or damascus.
MikeF
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