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Jim K
November 6, 2005, 01:56 PM
Ranger was a Sears trademark, but Sears never made any guns themselves, they had their trade names (Ranger, Ted Williams, J.C. Higgins) put on guns made by others. That looks like a Marlin Model 100. The trigger guard should be bent back to its normal curve, though.
Serial numbers were not required on .22's and shotguns until 1968, and that rifle was discontinued in 1941.
Jim
kentucky_smith
November 6, 2005, 02:06 PM
funny story: sometime in the early 60's, it was driven over by a car. papaw just taped and nailed it back together. Hence the need for a stock. Looks like gunparts has a stock for this thing if it is a Marlin 100.
Thanks.
Ala Dan
November 14, 2005, 12:05 AM
I believe that too be a Winchester model 67A .22LR. Reason being, dad
bought me one in 'bout 1955, and that kind'a looks like an exact copy.
Price was right too~$18.50 U.S. dollars at the local hardware store.:D
Jim K
November 14, 2005, 08:29 PM
It is not a Winchester 67. The 67 has a shorter receiver area behind the bolt handle, and the bolt knob comes down right at the trigger guard. The Marlin Model 100 has the receiver as shown, with the bolt knob well ahead of the trigger guard and a long area of receiver ahead of the bolt handle.
Jim
Jim Watson
November 14, 2005, 10:35 PM
It looks like a Marlin to me, too, even though the shape of the cocking knob is different from illustrations in my '50s and '60s publications. Likely this rifle is older than that, the base model goes back to 1936.
kentucky_smith
November 15, 2005, 01:52 PM
family history dates it to sometime in the '30s. I'm pretty sure it's a Marlin, probably a 100 or something like it.
Steven Mace
November 15, 2005, 08:35 PM
It looks like a Marlin Model 81 that was made from 1937-1940. Just my guess.
Steve Mace
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