Dad got his 1895 back

Status
Not open for further replies.

DIY_guy

Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2014
Messages
160
Back In 1900 Oscar Quisla Bought an 1895 Winchester rifle at a hardware store in Portage County, WI. The new rifle (serial number 749) and 3 boxes of 30-40 Krag shells cost him $45. He took that rifle on many deer hunts in WI.

There were no deer in Portage county at that time so Oscar and friends would board a train and ride North until they reached a logging camp where they would hitch a ride by horse and wagon where they rode with their tent, blankets and food until they reached the winter deer yards where the deer would congregate to eat slashings left behind by the loggers. The picture below was taken in 1905 when Oscar (far left) was 25 years old. On this trip they returned with one buck and one doe for each man. Oscar is holding the 1895 Winchester which has a shiny receiver. Most guns back then had a black or brown finish.

OscarQuisla2.jpg

OscarQuisla3.jpg

My Father’s family farm was only two miles from the Quisla Farm and since My Grandfather did not hunt, my father learned about hunting from Oscar. In 1958, when my Father was 23 years old, Oscar sold him the 1895 Lever action with 3 boxes of 30-40 Krag shells for $45.

In 1961, my Parents moved to Milwaukee and my Father left the 30-40 Krag back at the farm since he had no use for the Rifle in the city but he would travel back to the farm each year to deer hunt with the krag.

In 1964 Oscar Died at the age of 84. That year, when my Father returned to Portage County to live and farm with his young family, he went to the home farm to retrieve the Krag. His older brother who was never happy about my Father leaving the farm for the big city, told my Father that the gun was no longer his and that his older brother was keeping the rifle as a remembrance of Oscar and that is “Farm property”.

OscarQuisla4.jpg

As the years went by, my Father made attempts to get the rifle back but was unsuccessful. In 2008 with his brother having died in his 80's, my Father was back on the home farm doing some repairs and when finished, his sister asked how much she owed him for this troubles. My father said that he would like to have the Krag back. His sister went to the closet and retrieved the old rifle and gave it to him.

OscarQuisla5.jpg

OscarQuisla6.jpg

OscarQuisla7.jpg

OscarQuisla9.jpg

OscarQuisla91.jpg

I asked my Father (now 79) what he had planned for the 118 year old Krag and he said “I’m gonna shoot a deer with it”

OscarQuisla8.jpg

My oldest brother who reloads will make a few boxes of 30-40 cartridges for him and after the rifle is thoroughly cleaned and inspected, I would expect to see my Father in the woods at some point with the Krag.[/quote]
 
Wow!

What a story, and documentation & photos to go with it!
Thats a rare thing to have with old guns!

The only exception I would take to the story is:
Oscar is holding the 1895 Winchester which has a shiny receiver. Most guns back then had a black or brown finish.
What you are seeing is a blued & oiled rifle shining in the black & white photo of the time.

The recent photo even shows some remaining bluing on the lower tang where the lever protected it from wear and hand prints.
It was never unfinished & polished steel.

Oiled new bluing could appear as nickel plating or polished steel in black & white photos.

rc
 
Last edited:
Great story! I love to hear these histories. I especially respect his plans for the rifle. “I’m gonna shoot a deer with it” just makes me grin.
 
Wow that was a fascinating story. I have a model 1894 Win in 32-40 made in 1901 and would love to have that kind of history on it. I often hold it and wonder who bought it and where.
 
I also have an Winchester 1895 rifle, mine was built the year your Dad bought his, 1900. There is magic in the old ones that newer versions of the same Model do not have.
 
Great story! And great pictures! Looking forward to the one of your Dad with the rifle and his kill. I admire his persistence.
 
Thats an awesome story. I love old gun stories. I have one in my safe that has a good story too.

Just curious only because I am interested in colloquialisms. Who refers to it as a Krag? Does your father refer to that gun as a Krag or as a Winchester?
 
Also, on a side not, I saw some Remington Core-Lokt in 30-40 Krag not long ago. Kind of surprised me. Im sure its just leftovers from a limited production run, but if you dont want to reload there is hunting ammo out there.
 
What you are seeing is a blued & oiled rifle shining in the black & white photo of the time


Barrel clearly marked nickel steel. I've seen lots of examples of firearms from that period, and nickeling was pretty common.
 
That is a great story with spectacular documentation!

Nickel steel is an alloy of steel with a high nickel content. It has nothing to do with nickeling (coating the outside of an object with nickel). Thus, being made from nickel steel says nothing about what finish was applied to the gun.
 
Yep great story. My Grandpa used to ride the train from Kilborn(now the Wisconsin Dells) to Conover to hunt, because at that time there were no deer on his farm in Juneau County.(not true anymore) My youngest son, his great grand-son has used the same Winnie .32 special he did, to take deer. My dad used a Model 97 shotgun for 50 years before he broke down and bought a new 870, two years before he quit hunting. Three years ago I used the '97 to take a nice Tom turkey @ 20 yards. Even tho it only shoots 2 3/4" shells, it holds a 'ell of a pattern. Glad your dad got his gun back and has the opportunity to pass it on. The stories those old guns could tell.
 
Barrel clearly marked nickel steel. I've seen lots of examples of firearms from that period, and nickeling was pretty common.

Nickel steel indicates that it was made of that material, which was developed originally for the 1894 model so it could handle the .30-30 cartridge which was a smokeless powder cartridge and used higher pressure loads than the blackpowder cartridges that predated it.
Whether or not the rifle was "blued" or chromed or what is a separate matter. Based on the photos above I believe the rifle was blued (as others have said) but I could be wrong.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top