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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Does anyone know if it was common in the 1920's for Churchill to offer 25" barrels on 12 ga guns.
Last edited by Tamid; 07/29/16 02:26 PM.
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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I believe that Churchill kinda started the whole 25" bbl thing...something about himself blowing the muzzles off of a favorite gun prior to going to a big shoot...he had his smith bob the bbls to 25"....& it became a bit of a fashion...at least thats what ive read franc
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Good Shooting T.C. The Green Isle
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Blue Book of Gun Values states Churchill started producing the XXV guns in the early 1920s, noting they quickly became popular.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Thank you for that reference. Confirms Churchill's 25" gun but rather boring reading through two men's arguments which really had nothing in common.
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Tamid, Yes Churchill developed and marketed the 25" barrelled gun in the 20's, and called them XXVs. If you pick up a copy of his "Game Shooting" (ghosted by MacDonald Hastings) you get the story. He made many hundreds of them and was careful to publicise all the "posh" purchasers such as The Prince of Wales. He didn't just promote the guns, he pushed the shooting style he thought they demanded too, from his own shooting school in St Mary Cray, Kent. Bob inherited the EJ Churchill business form his Uncle "Ould Ted" when it was effectively bankrupt; it took him 20 years to get it back to robust health, and then WW11 scuppered him again. Ted could build a gun from his own hands, lock, stock and barrel, though I suspect Bob couldn't knock a nail in straight; his forte was selling and salesmanship. Churchill severely damaged his right eye in WW1 when experimenting with incendiary ammunition for the RAF. This, combined with his stocky build, led him to the XXV configuration, and what became known as the Churchill method of game shooting. On his day he was said to be a superb shot and was certainly a great stylist; the pics in the above book show a very classy act indeed. As per ... Abe books have some second hand copies ... [url=] http://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/SearchResults?an=robert+churchill&sts=t&tn=game+shooting[/url] Eug
Last edited by eugene molloy; 07/30/16 11:17 AM.
Thank you, very kind. Mine's a pint
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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You can make some pretty good buys these days on XXV's, especially in 12ga. Stubby 12's didn't stay in fashion, in spite of Mr. Churchill's efforts. But that period of time--between the wars--was one of intense competition in the British gun trade. They lost a lot of clients in the war, and some of those clients' guns ended up on the secondary market. Prior to WWI, anything with barrels shorter than 28" (and 30's were also very common) were quite unusual. So offering short-barreled guns was one way to tap into a new niche in the market. The 2" 12ga also came out of that same period. So did (although not from the UK) the first really popular OU: Browning's Superposed.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Would a plain box lock for $3000 be a good price!?
Last edited by Tamid; 07/30/16 03:12 PM.
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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I'd say any British-made Churchill (they had some guns made in Spain for them, and there are some other even cheaper guns that carry the Churchill name but have nothing to do with the Brit company) should be worth $3,000 if it's in good shape.
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Sidelock
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Sidelock
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Does anyone know if it was common in the 1920's for Churchill to offer 25" barrels on 12 ga guns. They did offer 25 inch barrels in the 1920's. They were badged as such with the trademark "XXV." I have a Churchill catalogue from 1922 and on page 26 of that catalogue they promote the 25 "XXV" inch barrel guns over several pages. They offered 25 inch barrels on 12 gauges before WW l. But I don't think they were marketed/promoted as "XXV" though until after WW l. A couple of different places in the book "The House of Churchill" it is stated that Robert Churchill began to experiment with 25 inch barrel guns in 1911. "The House of Churchill" on page 104 calls the story (of the origin of 25 inch barrels XXV) of a gun having damaged barrels and being shortened to 25 inches as "most unlikely" and that Robert Churchill denied that rumor.
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