In my opinion your best value...
How do you impute "value" to an entry level shooting man's gun bought "blind-man's-bluff" from thousands of miles away, without ever having put the gun to your shoulder? You could buy a servicable American box lock sans ejectors for less than shipping and handling from across the big pond.
And I am ammused by the caveat pretaining to "reputable" Birmingham and/or English provincial makers; please tell us who are the disreputable ones to avoid; and where does the finacially challanged neophyte nimrod get parts and repairs for his one-off entry level import? That $850 Trojan I bought my son keeps looking better and better, all things considered.
By the way, I didn't just fall off te hay wagon and invent this stuff. I just finished 122,000 words of case-on-point documented analysis in my new book,
Parker Guns: Shooting Flying and the American Experience (Collector Books of Paducah KY, scheduled for release summer 2008). Chapter 17 ("Apple Pie vrs. Spotted Dick") and Ch.18 (Americans Search for Their Own Identity") cover the evolution of American made shotguns, from the American gunsmith/makers importing locks and barrels pre-Civil War, assembling them and stamping their own names; to Charles Parker's industrial operation making America's first breechloader SxS ca.1866, and fighting the winning battle with imported guns; to the machine-made interchangable guns of the late 1870s, going head to head with the leading Birmingham and provincial imports; to sales of the "reputable" imported guns suffering badly in the 1880s and thereafter, as the American makers-L.C.Smith, Lefever, Parker, Baker, Ithaca, and others reigned supreme. Aside from "reputable" in connection with British imports, another word comes to mind:
Anglophile.
First, any anglophile worth his predisposition, knows that spotted dick is a popular English dessert. The anglo-malady, however, harks back to the earliest times of fowling pieces, when Aimwell (an English gunmaker), in a discourse with his student Friendly about imported guns said, "...the foreigners have found out our foible in that, as in most of their rarities; that is, if they are but far fetched and dear bought, they are sure to please." From
The Art of Shooting Flying (1767) by Thomas Page.
After being at Pintail Point MD for several days, trolling the fine guns at the Game Fair part of the Vintage Cup, it's hard to seperate the fine imports from the fine American-made guns, grade for grade, prices all being out of sight. Some prefer imports, others like home grown, with no discernable quantitative differences (meaning scores) when it comes to suitability for purpose. Andy Duffy won the first Vintage Cup in 1997 with his father's Parker GH and probably would have won it with a Purdey or N.H.Davis or Baker or Greener, so long as they were choked right and fit. Now I have gone full circle: How do you buy a suitable/shootable gun at auction in overseas without ever putting it to your shoulder? EDM