Howdy
Pre-64? That should be easy as I don't own any 'new' Winchesters post 1964.
Might as well start with the oldest. Winchester Model 1886, 45/70, made in 1886. Yes, it has been refinished.
Model 1873, 38-40, 1887. All original except the magazine tube.
Model 1892 Rifle at top. 44-40, made in 1895. This was the first rifle I used in CAS for the first few years.
Model 1892 Saddle Ring Carbine, at bottom, 44-40, made in 1918.
Model 1892, 32-20. 1911. New barrel and magazine tube.
Model 1890, 2nd Model, 22 Short. 1906.
Model 1890, 3rd Model, 22 Long, 1908.
Model 1890, 3rd Model, 22 Long Rifle, 1928.
My Dad's little Model '06. 22 Short, Long, Long Rifle. Dad was a teenager in the 1930s. One day he told his dad that he wanted a 22 target rifle. Pop commuted into New York City every day, so one day he walked into the Abercombie and Fitch store on Madison Avenue. Abercrombie and Fitch had a huge store in those days, they were not the yuppie outfit they are today that just sells clothes on the internet. The store was ten stories tall and there was an entire floor devoted just to guns. There was even a shooting gallery in the basement. Anyway Pop was a great fisherman, but he didn't know anything about guns. So he came home with this little 22 gallery rifle and gave it to my dad. I don't think Dad ever had the heart to tell his dad that it wasn't what he wanted. He wanted a target rifle, probably a bolt action 22.
Here is a photo of Dad shooting the little Model '06 on the shores of Lake Kathadin in Maine in 1931. He would have been 15 at the time. You can see how the little gallery rifle is too small for Dad, he is all hunched up to shoot it.
Dig the knickers.
Anyway, Dad gave me the little '06 when I was about 14 and I will always cherish it as a memory of him.
Model 61. 22 Short, Long, Long Rifle. 1946.
My newest Winchester. A Model 1894 Carbine from somewhere in 1943-1948. Winchester dates get a little bit sketchy in that time frame. 30-30.