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Connecticut Yankees - how a little company up north brought the tradition of making beautiful shotguns back to America

Connecticut Yankees - how a little company up north brought the tradition of making beautiful shotguns back to America
The double guns made in America from the 1890s until World War II evoke an era when gentlemen hunted in neckties, when clouds of ducks filled the skies, and when coveys of bobwhites lived on every Southern farm. The A.H. Foxes, Parkers, L.C. Smiths, Ithacas, Winchesters, and Lefevers built in the Northeast combined sturdiness and grace in a distinctly American way, and their makers proudly and aggressively advertised their wares as “Old Reliable” (Parker) and “the Finest Gun in the World” (Fox).
Durable though they were, American doubles couldnÂ’t survive World War II. The mass-production techniques that helped win the war ushered in a new era of stamped, pressed, and cast parts. Gunmakers could offer pumps and autoloaders that held more shells and cost less money to postwar consumers who had learned the value of firepower in Europe and the Pacific. All the old doubles except the Model 21 disappeared in the late forties.
They would exist today only as memories, collectibles, and heirlooms if not for the vision of Antony Galazan, whose Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing Company builds gorgeous versions of the Fox, Parker, and Winchester Model 21, as well as the high-grade Galazan over-and-under, the Round Body side-by-side, and the RBL (round box lock), a new, affordable double.