To illustrate this point, Stretch sent in a few of his older firearms:

Oldest firearm I have is a M-H dated 1877. Ammo for it was $2 @ round 8 years ago. Hate to think What it is now. Besides, never had it checked it out by a ‘smith to assess its safety.Martini-Henry, in this case. First British firearm built for self-contained ammunition. Tamed a continent, that sort of thing... Plus - look at that bayonet!

Also have a Trapdoor Springfield, Model 1884. Also reluctant to fire it. Has carving on butt that indicates it was carried by New York Volunteer Infantry in Cuba during the Spanish-American War.Trapdoor Springfields. On the want list right next to a Sharps. You want to talk about a firestorm controversy? The Trapdoor vs. Sharps makes Glock vs. 1911 or AR vs. AK look like child's play.
The oldest weapon I regularly fire is a Swedish M96 made in 1911. It performs as you’d expect a Swedish built Mauser to.

Revolvers from the 1920 or 30s also get fired, albeit infrequently. Not too keen to fire H&R break tops often.I've got one H&R breaktop revolver, in .22LR. It's a Sportsman, and it's a fine plinker as long as you keep the rear sight permanently glued to the right. I centered it once. Once.
Thanks for sharing, Stretch!
That is all.
6 comments:
People do shoot Trapdoor Springfields. Reduced loads and common sense. Here's a Dutch shooter that uses one in competition along with his pet load:
http://www.schiferli.net/Shooting%20Springfield.htm
Even better, here's a lot of Trapdoor shooters and a wealth of collected info about the rifle, loads, and competitive shoots around the country:
http://www.trapdoorcollector.com/shooterstext.html
My current oldest weapons are a 1903 dated Swedish Mauser and a 1912 dated Chilean Mauser converted to God's Own Caliber (New Testament) in 1961.
But realistically, aren't we using Hundred+ year old designs in a lot of our Firearms? Granted, they are being manufactured today out of stronger materials, but a Smith K-Frame was first seen in 1899, the 1911, Hunting Rifles based on 1898 Mausers, etc.
Even some of the "Tupperware" pistols use the same "JMB (PBUH!)" internal designs.
So I could never figure out why an 1893 dated Moisen-Nagant can be sent through the Mail, yet and 1899 dated Moisen-Nagant has to go through an FFL.
And of course, just how old is a "Handgonne?"
ASM: Thanks for the Trapdoor info. My Spring Mission is now to put my Trapdoor back on the firing line.
My three oldest firearms are:
1917 Enfield (1918)
1911 Colt (1917)
Colt Vest Pocket .25 (1922)
I HAD a 1896 Swedish Mauser (1917) but I sold it a while back.
I wouldn't hesitate to fire any of these, in fact the 1917 is a damned fine shooter, and promises to remain one for the foreseeable future.
Just as all three of my AR-15's do.
Forgot the Snider, the actual first Brit gun built to take self contained cartridges.
My oldest is an 1891 made H&R "Automatic" revolver in .32 S&W Long. Grampa's gun he kept just in case someone robbed the gas station he owned.
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