132 years old winchester rifle found ......

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Rusted, 132-year-old Winchester rifle found against tree in Nevada national park






By Matt Finn
·Published January 15, 2015·
FoxNews.com


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The story of how it got there may never be known, but a rusting 132-year-old Winchester rifle -- known in U.S. lore as "the gun that won the West" -- was recently found resting against a juniper tree in a Nevada national park.

The gun, its stock split, gray and faded like driftwood, and its steel barrel rusted brown, blended in perfectly against the tree in a remote part of the Great Basin National Park until a National Parks Service employee spotted it.




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“The rifle, exposed for all those years to sun, wind, snow and rain, was found leaning against a tree in the park,” said Nichole Andler, chief of interpretation at Great Basin National Park.

"Perhaps it belonged to a lone cowboy riding the high range."
- Winchester publicist Scott Engen

An engraving on the gun marks it as a "Model 1873," and Andler said further research showed the serial number on the lower tang, or portion of the grip, matched up with records held at the Center for the West at the Cody Firearms Museum in Cody, Wyo. with a manufacture and shipping date of 1882, Andler said. According to Morgan, Utah-based Winchester Repeating Arms, 720,610 of the rifles were manufactured between 1873 and 1916. In 1882 alone, more than 25,000 of the 1873 models were made.




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The gun's model number was easily made out on the rusted steel. (U.S. National Parks Service)


The gun sold for $50 when they first came out -- nearly $1,000 in today's dollars. By 1882, they were selling for half that price and touted as an accessible “everyman’s” rifle.

The discovery was enough to fire imaginations about the fate of the gun's owner. An article on Winchester's website offered a few theories.

"Perhaps it belonged to a lone cowboy riding the high range," wrote Winchester publicist Scott Engen. "Perhaps it was set aside by a sourdough prospector in his search for a vein of rich ore. Whatever the actual story, it has the makings of a great campfire tale.

On Great Basin Park's Facebook page, the same questions are being bandied about.



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Parks employees taped the gun together to keep it from falling apart. (U.S. National Parks Service)


“Who left the rifle? When and why it was leaned against the tree? And, why was it never retrieved?” reads a post on the page.

The park's cultural resource staff is combing through old newspapers and family histories hoping to solve the mystery. But posters to the site had their own suspicions.

"No big mystery," wrote Kenneth Larson. "A hunter left it. Set it against the tree, took care of the deer, drug it or packed it out on a horse. Got to the bottom and realized he'd left the rifle and said screw it. Or went back and couldn't find it.”

Park officials will exhibit the rifle before it is sent to conservators to stabilize the wood and apply museum conservation techniques to prevent further deterioration.



Matt Finn is a part of the Junior Reporter program at Fox News. Get more information on the program here and follow them on Twitter: @FNCJrReporters

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/01/15/132-year-old-winchester-rifle-found-propped-under-desert-tree/
 
Wow, that would be something to come upon, wouldn't it?

My husband is an antique gun collector, mostly military rifles. Also a gunsmith.
 
We may visit the Cody Firearms Museum when we are there next July just prior to going to spend a week at a guest ranch near Wapiti......
 
Amazing that nothing knocked it down, or the tree didn't grow around it in all that time.
 
Amazing that nothing knocked it down, or the tree didn't grow around it in all that time.

Yeah, that's what I thought, too but then I realized that the Park is a desert and probably gets very little precipitation......I have yet to visit this one....
 
We may visit the Cody Firearms Museum when we are there next July just prior to going to spend a week at a guest ranch near Wapiti......

Very cool. I've wanted to go there for years. Some day I would like to own a sharps but even the replicas are almost $2k
 
:lol: Way to spoil the magic..
No way! I'm sure there's still an interesting story behind it; I just don't think someone left it there in the first few years that they bought the gun. :lol:
 
How old is the tree where it was propped up?
 
Trees in the desert don't grow fast. Just a guess but it looks around three hundred years old. Juniper trees can live fron 400 to 700. Also because they don't grow fast they wouldn't grow around the rifle very much. Rifle looks like it could have been out there 100 years to me judging from the rust and wood decomp but I'm no expert.
 
I hope we get an update after the experts finish their examination.
 
I hope we get an update after the experts finish their examination.

Yeah, they had to wrap the stock and forearm in special museum tape. I wonder where it will eventually end up as a display? Maybe in the Great Basin Park if they have such facilities for artifacts.
 
You would have to cut the tree down and count it rings to see how old it's .
Not always. You can usually get an estimated age by observing its size if you're knowledgable about the species and the environment where it's growing.
 
Not always. You can usually get an estimated age by observing its size if you're knowledgable about the species and the environment where it's growing.

I wonder if anyone would think of doing this to establish how long the gun was sitting there.
 
I wonder if anyone would think of doing this to establish how long the gun was sitting there.

Well, the gun's just 132 years old and the trees Johnnyghost was talking about are 300 years or older wouldn't help address your question...would it?
 
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