Project rifles that used simple tang sights (top to bottom): Stevens M44, Hopkins & Allen, Stevens M1915 Favorite action.
The reason for interest in tang sights may be debatable, but among collectors, it is certainly a rarity. The number of sporting rifles originally carrying tang sights is small, even though the top tangs of virtually all single shots and lever actions were drilled for such sights until at least World War II. Then too, many of these sights have been removed by later owners (easily seen by blue wear or missing plug screws) because they didn’t understand the sight’s proper use. I have even been told that some auction companies remove tang sights to sell as a separate “lot,” putting profit ahead of preserving a historical artifact. It seems humans are continually finding new ways to demonstrate their ignorance.
Then there are single-shot target/match rifles. One of these on a gun show table will cause everyone walking past to stop for a look. Even if the rifles have no engraving or fancy wood, their styling is much more than simply “form follows function.” German and Swiss Schüetzen rifles, 1,000-yard, black-powder target arms, American 200-yard offhand rifles and .22 rimfire gallery rifles have an attraction that many feel but can’t describe. Perhaps it is that these objects evoke an earlier time when we made beautiful things; buildings, furniture, art and, yes, firearms. This is far different from today when our progeny strives for meaningless college degrees, during which they are taught that it grants them the right to dismantle and destroy.
Work begins with a couple pieces of scrap steel.
This story is from the November - December 2020 edition of Rifle.
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This story is from the November - December 2020 edition of Rifle.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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