I was fortunate to spend a few days with M.(McKinley) V.(Vern) Highsmith of Memphis while my wife, a late 1970s Saint Jude survivor, registered and ran the Saint Jude 1/2 marathon with a full marathon option. Word was sent that he may not remember me so this visit possibly was one of the last few opportunities to ask him a few questions before his short-term memory is all but lost. At 87 years of age at times he is still quite sharp and still goes to work daily with this past Friday only working 1/2 day. He said he was rechequering project. Hi was born on July 15, 1922 and entered the Navy circa 1940(according to Hi) where not only could he hit just about any target, but could also repair the Remington Model 11s or Humpbacks as he called them. When the fighting was fierce in WWII I think he even slept near the range and with only cotton, if anything, for his ears led to permanent damage. I asked him was the Navy sad to see him go and his response was that it really didn't matter as he had better things to do. His uncle was in the Spanish-American War and decided to stay in Manilla where he had some post at the paper. When his uncle was taken by the Japanese and killed, Hi was going to join whether drafted or not and hopefully head toward Manilla, but he never left the States. By the way Mrs. Highsmith is gourmet wild game cook and her cooking is an excellent pairing to conversations with Hi.
Below are a couple pics of my potential young sportmen(Owen F. left and Benjamin W. right) and M.V. Highsmith as well as his library.



As a side note the slim red book right of the green "The Gun" is a 1970s reprint of "The Gun, 1834" so I assume "The Gun" began as a smaller edition and grew to what we know today.

W.W. Greener’s Choke Bore Guns: Tried at Targets and on Game(How to Load?)
http://books.google.com/books?id=kTT-GwAACAAJ&dq=choke+bore+by+w.w.+greener&lr=An Essay on Shooting – W. Cleator – 1879
http://books.google.com/books?id=43ACAAA...;q=&f=false was an interesting read as how the tubes were checked with different steel and lead cylinders as well as Manton's Compass to check the tube thinkness.
Instructions to Young Sportsmen -
http://books.google.com/books?id=vZ9BAAA...q=&f=false, all 3 volumes are a must read as today many of the common courtesies seem to be lost in the obsession for bag limits.
At any rate, at the retrieval of each text, he would ask the title(and sometimes author) and whether it was Sir Ralph Payne Gallwey, James Purdey, Greener, he had something to add.
Crosschisles & Craig Havener I again communicated your greetings. And if you know him, you realize what I mean by communicated.
Kind Regards,
Raimey
rse