Both rifles have taken piles of game over the last century and change, and these two examples still shoot. Sporterized ’03 Springfields have gone everywhere and shot everything, while the 6.5 Mannlicher was popular among African professionals including Karamojo Bell, although it never caught on here.
Month: January 2019





















It is a Sporterized 1903 Springfield in caliber 7mm-08. That I won in an Auction from one of my Sponsors – Lock, Stock, Barrel & Investment. Frankly I was shocked that I won it as I had put in a very low bid.
But somehow I got lucky. Now all I have to do after finding a good Gun Smith that is. I just have to finish off the stock which is very rough right now.
Plus put a Tinmey trigger on it, so that I can at least hit the board side of the Pacific ocean. Followed by putting one of my surplus scopes laying around in my “shop” / garage on it. Then to top it off add a recoil pad as I have turned into a real wimp, When it comes to recoil.
So if any of you good folks have any ideas or comment to ad to this conversation about this rifle. Please feel free to jump in. Especially since I have no experience when it comes to the 7mm-08 round! Grumpy
































Some random NSFW



In light of Dave’s recent list of people who he wouldn’t hunt with, it’s an interesting footnote that both rifles have Ernest Hemingway (No. 1 on Dave’s list) connections: Hemingway himself favored a sporterized Springfield and took it with him to Africa. And, in his famous story “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber,” set on safari, Margot Macomber wields a 6.5 Mannlicher with deadly precision.
Enough literary digression. Here are the rifles:
Lance Larson’s 03 Springfield

The stock was total carved by hand in a stock blank of beautiful fiddleback walnut he picked from the Reinhart Fajen company back in the day when everyone got their stocks from Fajen.
Dad shaped the stock to copy a Weatherby monte carlo stock. He did the inlays by hand with ebony and ivory piano keys and a diamond of solid silver in the buttstock. And, of course he glass-bedded the stock. I have used it many times over the years.
In fact, the first time I shot it on a deer hunt when I was about 12 or 13, I crept on the stock and the scope got me in the nose real good. This was the rifle that cured my tendency to creep on a scope.
The scope is a Weaver K4 with Weaver mounts and rings. I brought it to the range a few months ago and at over 50 years old, it still shoots 1-inch groups. Since I lost my father this year, this rifle means even more to me.
Harold’s Mannlicher-Schoenauer

The set trigger breaks at a half-pound and was probably set that way at the factory in Austria when she was built in 1920. Naturally, she has the silky-smooth action, rotary magazine and high level of workmanship that made these rifles famous.
My guess is that she was imported right after production OR she was a bring-back from World War II. Whoever first had her put on a cocking-piece ghost-ring peep sight.
When I do my job right she will group three shots into about 1.5 inches at 100 yards and would undoubtedly do much better if scoped. So, because of my old eyesight, I keep my shot to those less than 150 yards. You may notice that I refer to “her” in the feminine mode.
Due to her petite build, gentile curves and old age, I refer to her as “Granny.” By the way, Granny can still bite! She’s helped me take two deer, both one-shot kills.
There are your choices, and they are dandies. Thanks to everyone who responded to the Pledge Week plea for more guns.
You’ll be seeing more of your rifles, handguns, and shotguns in the coming weeks, and it’s a whole lot easier to put on good gunfights when I’ve got lots of good guns to choose from. Meanwhile, vote and comment below and keep the gun pictures coming to fsgunnuts@gmail.com.

This means that police executing a Gun Violence Restraining Order can not only sweep a gun owner’s home for firearms, but for ammunition and certain firearm accessories as well.
The Wall Street Journal reports that misdemeanor domestic violence charges–such as “harmful touching of a spouse, roommate or dating partner”–can now be treated on part with domestic violence felonies and result in a total forfeiture of Second Amendment rights.
AWR Hawkins is an award-winning Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News and the writer/curator of Down Range with AWR Hawkins, a weekly newsletter focused on all things Second Amendment. He is the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com. Sign up to get Down Range at breitbart.com/downrange.

An English gentleman hailing from Bristol stopped in this week (March, 2006), and he doesn’t seem inclined to leave any time soon. He’s been on his journey for quite some time; and though he looks much younger, he came into this world when Theodore Roosevelt was our president. In fact, he’s 101 years old! He won’t really say how or when he came to these American shores. It’s simply irrelevant to his way of thinking. America is a land of immigrants, and he counts himself as one.



Distinguished in his appearance, he’s of stout English lineage; a scion of the well known George Gibbs of 39 Corn Street, Bristol. His features also show close kinship to the Webley family. Perhaps his mother was of that stock.
He told me he was originally intended for Africa or India, but he really won’t say whether his wanderings took him there. I suspect he was there on brief occasions. Conceived as a .450 Nitro Express, his birthright engraved in the steel of his barrels proudly declares, “GEORGE GIBBS 39 CORN STREET, BRISTOL .450-3 1/4” STRAIGHT TAPER SOLID METAL CASE 70 GRS CORDITE, 480 GRS NICKEL COATED BULLET.” Yes he was made for what may have been the preeminent choice of the newfangled cordite cartridges in 1905, the year of his birth.
His calling for Africa and India fell to politics. It so happened that about the time of this gentleman’s birth there were simultaneous rebellions in India and the Sudan. The rebels armed themselves with stolen 577/450 Martini-Henrys. In an effort to deny the rebels any access to ammunition, the British Foreign Office forbade the use of all .458 caliber rifles in those areas. So my visitor was stymied in his youth, when otherwise so much opportunity lay at his feet. Sadly, he was relegated to retirement just when his brothers and cousins born a few years later and of slightly different caliber came to the forefront. Then, as he grew older, rifles of his kind appeared less frequently in the hunting fields. Wars and mass production turned hunters toward the bolt action of Peter Paul Mauser. Fine English double rifles were just too costly for the modern age. For a long time there was no ammunition for this sporting gent, not because the ban continued, but because of simple disuse. On the brighter side, his early retirement and light use contributed so much to his good health as he passes the first century of life. He now is as fit and able as he was a hundred years ago!
This fellow occupied a position near the middle of the British double rifle social strata. Let me explain.
The pinnacle was held by the London sidelocks. Those surnames were and are Purdey, Holland & Holland, and Woodward. A different breed altogether; indeed, a different species of rifle. Only the wealthiest could own one.
At the bottom were plainly made boxlocks, mostly of Birmingham. These were “working guns” and work they did! We now see these after their many years of toil. They are worn, sometimes loose, and completely unadorned. Worse yet, these working guns are often “restored” by some hack who slicks them up with all sorts of shiny finish and mechanical remedies.
The middle ground is occupied by gents like my visitor. They are boxlocks, but of extreme high quality. Not plain working guns, these were adorned with fine engraving and nice wood. They were crafted with care commiserate with a London sidelock; but being of simpler design, they required perhaps half the labor. Though not inexpensive, they were affordable to a wider clientele. Well-born Englishmen bought rifles of this class also.


The action is a Webley A&W C – the “Screw Grip.” It is adorned with full coverage fine English scroll and retains all of its original color hardening. The bottom plate is blackened, and its finish has faded to resemble the color hardening. The word, “SAFE” is inlaid in gold on the top tang. The trigger guard, also fully scroll engraved, has a long tang extending to the steel trapdoor grip cap. The trigger guard retains most of its original black. The grip cap is fully scroll engraved and color hardened. The barrels remain perfectly tight on the face.



This rifle is wooded with very dense quarter sawn English walnut having moderate figure. The pistol grip buttstock is paneled behind the action, ending in drop points. Its length of pull is 14 ¾” over a 1″ pigskin covered pad. It sports a blank gold oval. The stock and forend are very nicely checkered in a point pattern. The rifle is equipped with sling eyes.

