Should my guns eventually be catalogued by an auctioneer, I expect my ownership to make not a jot of difference to the valuation. Frankly, nobody is going to pay more for the bragging rights of owning a gun once waved at pheasants in my distinctly average hands.
If, however, a gun once graced the crooked arm of England’s greatest shot, a famous big-game hunter or a writer with a cult following, the story is very different. For those bragging rights, collectors will pay handsomely.
Such guns have what the professionals call provenance — a history that is verifiable and evocative, valuable even. Because our best guns last several lifetimes of fair use, their story and that of their owner becomes part of the folklore that attaches itself to the gun.
Here I examine a famous five of my choosing — guns that were once the property of our heroes and would hold a hallowed place in any collection.
Plane crash survivor
Denys Finch Hatton’s Lancaster .450 If you have seen Out Of Africa, Denys Finch Hatton is played by Robert Redford. Finch Hatton’s father was Earl of Winchilsea and he was educated at Eton and Oxford, where he proved a good sportsman. Aged only 24, he bought land in British East Africa and, thereafter, spent half the year hunting, which was his great passion.
He became a professional hunter in 1925 and his reputation, society connections and prodigious skills brought him many wealthy clients, including Edward VIII when he was Prince of Wales. He flew a Gypsy Moth over his beloved hunting country, but early planes were dangerous and Finch Hatton died when he crashed near Tsavo National Park, in 1931. His grave in the Ngong Hills in Kenya still stands, a lonely obelisk recalling a world long gone.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 17, 2020-Ausgabe von Shooting Times & Country.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 17, 2020-Ausgabe von Shooting Times & Country.
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