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Boss & Co makers of some mighty awesome looking Firearms at an awesome price!!!

Boss & Co is London’s oldest gunmaker, a company that has remained in privately-owned operation since being established. Whether you are a seasoned shooter, an owner or an enthusiast, this insight into Boss & Co history will tell the story of the innovators and craftsmen who made the company what it is today.

The LATE 1700s TO EARLY 1800s

Boss. A family name synonymous with fine gunmaking.

The Boss family originated from Leicestershire and had no roots in gunmaking when William Boss began an apprenticeship in 1773, aged just 15. His commitment to becoming a gunmaker was clear, and he moved away from his family to Birmingham to be closer to his mentor, gun and pistol maker Thomas Ketland.

Excelling at his craft, and already making a name for himself, William Boss then moved to London where the finest guns were being produced. There he could further refine his skills and become a part of the dominating London gun industry.

Soon he found a new mentor: Joseph Manton. He was a leader in his field and a man who only employed top-rate journeymen which, by this time, William was.

Staying with Manton for a number of years, William fathered three sons during his time with the firm, each of whom became an apprentice to their father. Sadly, while teaching his youngest son Thomas the art of gunmaking, William died. At this time, the death of a gunmaking father marked the end of any apprenticeship for his remaining sons. But Manton made an exception for the 19-year-old Thomas and allowed him to continue with the firm as his natural talent for the craft was clear.

Little did anyone know that by allowing Thomas Boss to continue his apprenticeship, it would be the start of a story that would secure the Boss family name at the very heart of gunmaking for centuries to come.

1812 -1826

Building Boss & Co

Eventually Thomas established a name for himself as a top gunmaker. He worked mostly as an outworker, a position that saw him finishing guns for the best-known gunmakers of the time – something he excelled at.

This way of working continued for many years, and we have to remember the sheer scale of the London gunmaking business at this time meant he was a man in demand.
The quality of his workmanship ensured his reputation as a gunmaker of esteem across the city; however, for a man as ambitious and industrious as Thomas Boss, it wasn’t long before he gained the will and capital to create a gun bearing his own name: Boss.

In 1812 Boss & Co was born. Thomas placed adverts in newspapers addressed to gentlemen, sportsmen and others, announcing Boss & Co to the nation. These adverts promoted ‘self-acting safety guns, constructed to remove all apprehension of danger as they cannot be discharged except when held in the shooting position’. Proudly, these guns were manufactured ‘in a superior style of elegant workmanship’ by Thomas Boss of Edgware Road, London.

At this time, Thomas provided home visits to potential customers by day, and at his private home of an evening, but that was soon to change.

1827 – 1856

The making of Boss & Co

As is true of any company wanting to make a name for itself amongst established competition, Thomas Boss knew the importance of image.

A home visit was a great way to start, but the monied gun buyers of London liked the kudos of visiting premises where they could touch and feel the product and see it being made. A move to the West End sent out the right message, and 73 James’s Street became the iconic home of Boss & Co.

As the reputation of Boss & Co grew, so did the number of customers through the door. Soon Thomas Boss sought his own apprentices and journeyman gun makers, needing up to ten skilled staff and two apprentices. Two of these new employees were nephews of Thomas Boss, men who would go on to play an important role in the future of Boss & Co as it developed.

1851 saw Boss & Co invited to participate in Prince Albert’s Great Exhibition alongside other renowned gun makers. This invitation marked the increased status of Boss & Co as one of London’s leading gun makers and to celebrate they created a special pair of dueling pistols for the event. These pistols are now back in Boss & Co ownership and form an important part of the company archive.

1857 – 1890

The Paddison Years

By now Boss & Co was a well-established, highly regarded gun maker. Their output was sought after and their order book ever-increasing.

Thomas Boss, the creator of this success and reputation, died in 1857 having lived to see his name rise to the highest levels, but he left behind a company without leadership and direction.

By default, Amy, widow of Thomas, took over the business. But she had no gunmaking experience and would often seek the support and guidance of her employees to help run the company, a situation which was far from ideal for the now-famous Boss & Co.

Ageing in years, Amy turned to her nephews Edward and James Paddinson for assistance. The partnership worked well and lasted for many years up to the death of Amy in 1872. Edward and James then took over the firm as beneficiaries of her will.

The Paddinson brothers had trained and worked with Boss & Co for many years and were well-placed to continue its legacy. However, James Paddinson died just one year after taking control, leaving Edward as sole custodian.

Edward continued to produce the best quality London guns for the next 17-years, with high quality continuing to take focus over innovation and evolution. In 1890, ill health and personal financial concerns prompted him to seek a partner, and he welcomed John Robertson to the fold.

Robertson has long-supplied skilled work to Boss & Co and, having had first-hand experience of his work, Paddison had little hesitation in offering Robertson a half-share in the company.

1891 – 1917

The Robertson Era

The Robertson-Paddinson partnership would last just one year before Edward succumbed to illness and died.

Upon the death of Paddison in 1891 his half share passed to a nephew who had little interest in anything other than drawing his share of the profits. Eventually, in 1893, Robertson bought out the other half share and became the sole owner of Boss & Co, having had to re-mortgage his home to release the required funds. The company was now, finally, under his sole control.

Robertson was a recognised, first class gunmaker to the trade and had worked for a number of established gunmakers before joining Boss & Co. But what excited him was innovation.
Ownership of the company gave Robertson the platform he needed to release his ideas and Boss & Co, a brand which until now had focused on quality over innovation, would soon unleash a number of new concepts upon the market.

The Robertson era of Boss & Co was, to date, probably the most important period in the history of the company. It was a time when the company became known for quality, beauty and innovation and was a development which led to the Boss & Co name being revered around the world.

There is much to celebrate with Robertson, as he can be thanked for important innovations such as the Boss Single-Trigger, the Boss Ejector and the Boss Over and Under, each of such huge importance to Boss & Co, and the gun trade as we know it today. Such is the importance of the innovations of the Robertson era, a detailed account of each can be found here.

Another Boss & Co trademark that can be attributed to this period is Boss Rose and Scroll engraving. The Rose and Scroll design, introduced by Robertson, was the creation of an engraver named John Sumner, the third of four generations of engravers who all worked on Boss & Co guns. Again, we can attribute this era for creating one of the most recognizable elements of a Boss & Co, and one that remains a popular choice of finish to this day.

Robertson is a man who continues to be held in high regard, quoted as making the last significant changes to sporting guns, and shaping the way Boss & Co would be known for generations to come.

1917 – 1999

The Young Governors – The End of The Robertson Line

1917 saw the death of John Robertson, and Boss & Co was passed to the very capable hands of his three sons John, Sam and Bob, known in the industry as ‘The Young Governors’. The 1930s proved to be a tough time for gunmakers, but the young trio ran the firm with efficiency and continued to produce guns to a high standard for a discerning clientele.

Each of the brothers established a role for themselves within Boss & Co. John was in charge of the shop, now located in Dover Street, London. Sam managed the factory in Lexington Street, London, and Bob ran the shooting ground in Hendon.

By 1951 the last of the Young Governors died, but for many years thereafter the firm would still include a descendant of John Robertson amongst its ranks. It was as late as 1999 when the last Robertson left Boss & Co and so ended a family connection that had lasted for 109 years.

PRESENT

Boss & Co Today

Boss & Co continues today in private ownership as it always has since its founding in 1812, as London’s oldest gun company. Today it is owned by Arthur DeMoulas a man with a long-standing knowledge of, and appreciation for, the company, our heritage and guns.

Driven by his passion Arthur was finally able to acquire the company after many years of negotiating, such was his drive and determination to see the company run as he knew it deserved to be.

He understood the importance of private ownership, a fact which has enabled Boss & Co to continue to focus on building “Best Guns Only” and lead the revered ‘holy-trinity’ of London gunmakers, unencumbered by the distractions of diversification, that can arise from being part of a large luxury lifestyle brand conglomerate.

In fact, the first decision that Arthur communicated to the workforce on buying the company was that Boss & Co would continue to make “Best Guns Only” by hand, using traditional methods. Second grade and machine made guns would never be built at the company.

Since then under his leadership, the company has invested in the London workshop, has helped to secure key suppliers and set up an apprenticeship scheme to train and pass on the skills to a new generation of Boss & Co London gunmakers.

With full workbenches and an extended team of master craftsman, the next stage of Arthur’s vision was set in motion revitalising the excitement for innovation that was seen at Boss & Co during the late 1800s and early 1900s, when our company led the gun making world with new inventions, design and style.

Work is now underway to re-introduce unique Boss & Co products not seen for over 100 years, providing continuity with the most celebrated periods in our history under the stewardship of our forefathers such as John Robertson and Thomas Boss.

For Arthur, he simply sees himself as a custodian and trustee of the company in the continuum of the storied history of one of the most famous gun companies in the world. His enthusiasm, investment, drive, knowledge and respect for the company and passion will continue to set Boss & Co apart as the gun makers and builder of “Best Guns Only”.

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I wonder what kind of cookies works best? Asking for a friend!

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All About Guns COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Fieldcraft

Here is another sugguestion to drop a hint about for your Chirstmas present

Its a Colt New Frontier L-Series Made in 1974 Case Colored in caliber .22 Magnum. I loved mine until the tragic boat incident! Grumpy

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All About Guns COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Fieldcraft

Here is another sugguestion to drop a hint about for your Chirstmas present

Its an upside down Winchester Model 12  30″ Full Choke Barrel in 12ga

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Anybody out there have a clue on what caliber this fine looking rifle is?

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Which reminds me as I have to check my lottery ticket!!

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Dangerous Problem Crocodile Hunted in Zimbabwe

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COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Cops Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Leadership of the highest kind This great Nation & Its People

Roosevelt Pursues the Boat Thieves

Theodore Roosevelt was particularly fond of retelling the story of his pursuit and capture of the boat thieves in the badlands. He put the story on paper in his 1888 book Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail.

In early spring of 1886, just as the ice was beginning to break up on the Little Missouri River, three thieves cut Roosevelt’s boat from its mooring at the Elkhorn Ranch and took it downriver. Roosevelt, out of personal pride and duty as a Billings County Deputy Sheriff, chased after them with his ranch hands Bill Sewall and Wilmot Dow.

As you read the story, imagine the thrill of the entire event for Roosevelt. A spring flood is no trivial matter, and navigating a river jammed with ice and powerful currents is treacherous work. The weather was viciously cold.

The men he was chasing were armed and dangerous. How might you have reacted to the theft of a replaceable boat when capturing the thieves was so time-consuming and dangerous? The story begins with the ice breaking up on the Little Missouri River at the Elkhorn Ranch in March, 1886:Ice jam on the Little Missouri River

“It moved slowly, its front forming a high, crumbling wall, and creaming over like an immense breaker on the seashore; we could hear the dull roaring and crunching as it ploughed down the river-bed long before it came in sight round the bend above us.

The ice kept piling and tossing up in the middle, and not only heaped itself above the level of the banks, but also in many places spread out on each side beyond them, grinding against the cottonwood-trees in front of the ranch veranda….”

“At night the snowy, glittering masses, tossed up and heaped into fantastic forms, shone like crystal in the moonlight; but they soon lost their beauty, becoming fouled and blackened, and at the same time melted and settled down until it was possible to clamber out across the slippery hummocks.”

“We had brought out a clinker-built boat especially to ferry ourselves over the river when it was high, and were keeping our ponies on the opposite side….

This boat had already proved very useful and now came in handier than ever, as without it we could take no care of our horses.

We kept it on the bank, tied to a tree, and every day would carry it or slide it across the hither ice bank, usually with not a little tumbling and scrambling on our part, lower it gently into the swift current, pole it across to the ice on the farther bank, and then drag it over that…”

On the other side, Roosevelt discovered evidence of mountain lions hunting deer among the bluffs. He followed the trail, but, after losing the trail, he headed back, determined to hunt the mountain lions the next day.

“But we never carried out our intentions, for next morning one of my men, who was out before breakfast, came back to the house with the startling news that our boat was gone – stolen, for he brought with him the end of the rope with which it had been tied, evidently cut off with a sharp knife; and also a red woollen mitten with a leather palm, which he had picked up on the ice. ”

“We had no doubt as to who had stolen it; for whoever had done so had certainly gone down the river in it, and the only other thing in the shape of a boat on the Little Missouri was a small flat-bottomed scow in the possession of three hard characters who lived in a shack, or hut, some twenty miles above us, and whom we had shrewdly suspected for some time of wishing to get out of the country, as certain of the cattlemen had begun openly to threaten to lynch them.

They belonged to a class that always holds sway during the raw youth of a frontier community, and the putting down of which is the first step toward decent government….”

“The three men we suspected had long been accused – justly or unjustly – of being implicated both in cattle-killing and in that worst of frontier crimes, horse-stealing; it was only by an accident that they had escaped the clutches of the vigilantes the preceding fall.

Their leader was a well-built fellow named Finnigan, who had long red hair reaching to his shoulders, and always wore a broad hat and a fringed buckskin shirt.

He was rather a hard case, and had been chief actor in a number of shooting scrapes. The other two were a half-breed, a stout, muscular man, and an old German, whose viciousness was of the weak and shiftless type….We had little doubt that it was they who had taken our boat…”

“Accordingly we at once set to work in our turn to build a flat-bottomed scow wherein to follow them….In any wild country where the power of law is little felt or heeded, and where every one has to rely upon himself for protection, men soon get to feel that it is in the highest degree unwise to submit to any wrong…no matter what cost of risk or trouble.

To submit tamely and meekly to theft or to any other injury is to invite almost certain repetition of the offense, in a place where self-reliant hardihood and the ability to hold one’s own under all circumstances rank as the first of virtues.”

“Two of my cowboys, Sewall and Dow…set to work with a will, and, as by good luck there were plenty of boards, in two or three days they had turned out a first-class flat-bottom, which was roomy, drew very little water, and was dry as a bone; and though, of course, not a handy craft, was easily enough managed in going downstream. Into this we packed flour, coffee, and bacon enough to last us a fortnight or so, plenty of warm bedding, and the mess-kit; and early one cold March morning slid it into the icy current, took our seats, and shoved off down the river.”

Roosevelt had also brought along a copy of Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, and a camera to document the capture.
“There could have been no better men for a trip of this kind than my two companions, Sewall and Dow. They were tough, hardy, resolute fellows, quick as cats, strong as bears, and able to travel like bull moose.”

“For three days, the three men navigated the icy, winding river among the colorful clay buttes hoping to take the thieves captive without a fight. A shootout was a concern, for Roosevelt noted that “the extraordinary formation of the Bad Lands, with the ground cut up into cullies, serried walls, and battlemented hilltops, makes it the country of all others for hiding-places and ambuscades.”

However, Roosevelt was certain that the thieves would not suspect that he was in pursuit, for they had stolen virtually the only boat on the river. Roosevelt, Sewall, and Dow battled against the elements, too, enduring temperatures down to zero degrees Fahrenheit. Along the way, they “passed a group of tepees,” the “deserted winter camp of some Gros-ventre Indians, which some of my men had visited a few months previously on a trading expedition.”

Through numbing cold, they continued their pursuit.

“Finally our watchfulness was rewarded, for in the middle of the afternoon of this, the third day we had been gone, as we came around a bend, we saw in front of us the lost boat, together with a scow, moored against the bank, while from among the bushes some little way back the smoke of a camp-fire curled up through the frosty air. We had come on the camp of the thieves.

As I glanced at the faces of my two followers I was struck by the grim, eager look in their eyes. Our overcoats were off in a second, and after exchanging a few muttered words, the boat was hastily and silently shoved toward the bank.

As soon as it touched the shore ice I leaped out and ran up behind a clump of bushes, so as to cover the landing of the other, who had to make the boat fast. For a moment we felt a thrill of keen excitement and our veins tingled as we crept cautiously toward the fire, for it seemed likely that there would be a brush…”

“The men we were after knew they had taken with them the only craft there was on the river, and so felt perfectly secure; accordingly , we took them absolutely by surprise.

The only one in camp was the German, whose weapons were on the ground, and who, of course, gave up at once, his two companions being off hunting. We made him safe, delegating one of our number to look after him particularly and see that he made no noise, and then sat down and waited for the others.

The camp was under the lee of a cut bank, behind which we crouched, and, after waiting an hour or over, the men we were after came in. We heard them a long way off and made ready, watching them for some minutes as they walked toward us, their rifles on their shoulders and the sunlight glinting on the steel barrels.

When they were within twenty yards or so we straightened up from behind the bank, covering them with our cocked rifles, while I shouted to them to hold up their hands – an order that in such a case, in the West, a man is not apt to disregard if he thinks the giver is in earnest.

The half-breed obeyed at once, his knees trembling for a second, his eyes fairly wolfish; then, as I walked up within a few paces, covering the centre of his chest so as to avoid overshooting, and repeating the command, he saw that he had no show, and, with an oath, let his rifle drop and held his hands up beside his head.”

Roosevelt kept watch over the captives as Sewall and Dow chopped firewood. “I kept guard over the three prisoners, who were huddled into a sullen group some twenty yards off, just the right distance for the buckshot in the double-barrel.”

Unable to tie up their captives, for doing so meant, “in all likelihood, freezing both hands and feet off during the night,” the captives were made to remove their boots, “as it was a cactus country, in which a man could travel barefoot only at the risk of almost certainly laming himself for life.”
“By this time they were pretty well cowed, as they found out very quickly that they would be well treated so long as they remained quiet, but would receive some rough handling if they attempted any disturbance.”

“Next morning we started downstream, having a well-laden flotilla, for the men we had caught had a good deal of plunder in their boots, including some saddles….

Finnigan, who was the ringleader, and the man I was especially after, I kept by my side in our boat, the other two being put in their own scow, heavily laden and rather leaky, and with only one paddle.

We kept them just in front of us, a few yards distant, the river being so broad that we knew…any attempt to escape to be perfectly hopeless.”

Upon reaching an impassable ice jam in the river, Roosevelt, Sewall, and Dow debated how to proceed. Unwilling to abandon their supplies, they chose to wait for the icy river began to flow again.

Theodore Roosevelt Guards Boat Thieves
“I kept guard over the three prisoners, who were huddled into a sullen group some twenty yards off, just the right distance for the buckshot in the double-barrel.”

Harvard College Library Theodore Roosevelt Collection

“The next eight days were as irksome and monotonous as any I ever spent: there is very little amusement in combining the functions of a sheriff with those of an arctic explorer. The weather kept as cold as ever.”

“We had to be additionally cautious on account of being in the Indian country, having worked down past Killdeer Mountains, where some of my cowboys had run across a band of Sioux – said to be Tetons – the year before.

 

Very probably the Indians would not have harmed us anyhow, but as we were hampered by the prisoners, we preferred not meeting them; nor did we, though we saw plenty of fresh signs, and found, to our sorrow, that they had just made a grand hunt all down the river, and had killed or driven off almost every head of game in the country through which we were passing.”

 

“…If the time was tedious to us, it must have seemed never-ending to our prisoners, who had nothing to do but to lie still and read, or chew the bitter cud of their reflections…. They had quite a stock of books, some of a rather unexpected kind. Dime novels and the inevitable ‘History of the James Brothers’… As for me, I had brought with me ‘Anna Karénina,’ and my surroundings were quite grey enough to harmonize well with Tolstoï.”

Low on supplies by the time they reached the C Diamond ranch, Roosevelt, Sewall and Dow decided to split up; Sewall and Dow would continue downriver and Roosevelt would march the prisoners overland to Dickinson.

Before Sewall and Dow proceeded downriver, Roosevelt borrowed a pony and rode to the nearest ranch, where he hired the settler to drive his prairie schooner with “two bronco mares.” The settler “could hardly understand why I took so much bother with the thieves instead of hanging them offhand.” Roosevelt “soon found the safest plan was to put the prisoners in the wagon and myself walk behind with the inevitable Winchester.”

“Accordingly I trudged steadily the whole time behind the wagon through the ankle-deep mud. It was a gloomy walk. Hour after hour went by always the same, while I plodded along through the dreary landscape – hunger, cold, and fatigue struggling with a sense of dogged, weary resolution….”

 

“So, after thirty-six hours’ sleeplessness, I was most heartily glad when we at last jolted into the long, straggling main street of Dickinson, and I was able to give my unwilling companions into the hands of the sheriff. Under the laws of Dakota I received my fees as a deputy sheriff for making the three arrests, and also mileage for the three hundred odd miles gone over – a total of some fifty dollars.”

That Roosevelt went to such lengths to bring these three criminals to justice was uncommon in his time and place. Such magnanimity was not overlooked by the captives. Writing to Roosevelt from prison some time later, Mike Finnigan closed a letter, “P.S. Should you stop over at Bismarck this fall make a call to the Prison. I should be glad to meet you.”

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Darwin would of approved of this!

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A Westley Richards .577 ‘Elephant’ Rifle