sigp220.45
US Veteran
I love store brand guns - Ted Williams, J.C. Higgins, Glenfield, Western Auto, you name it and I've probably owned or still own one. They remind me of a time when a guy could go to Sears or J.C. Penney or Montgomery Wards and buy a good solid gun at a reasonable price.
Of course J.C. Penney didn't make the guns - they had a major builder make them and put the house brand on them. This tends to keep the prices down, another thing that appeals to me.
Here's my latest - it showed up on Facebook and was largely ignored by the AK/AR/XD crowd. Its the first I've seen - a Montgomery Ward Hawthorne Model 760, caliber .30/06. For the price of a Ruger LCP I brought it home.

It came with the rings but no scope, so I put this Nikon 2-7 on it.

Its been used, but not abused. The stock will finish up nicely, and it looks like a decent piece of wood. I'm sure this was somebody's deer and elk gun.

This is worth the price of admission - an FN Mauser Deluxe action. It is wonderfully smooth.

The bottom metal is actually metal.

Bolt knob is a nice touch.

It has iron sights, because in 1955 you'd have iron sights. And tail fins.

I'm sure the checkering is machine done, but it still looks good.


Men were men then. This is all the recoil pad a 1955 man needed.

And all this for next to nothing, because this is stamped on the barrel.

I just picked it up today, so I haven't shot it yet. I need a scratchy red flannel shirt and an appropriate chapeau, and maybe a pipe.
Anybody ever had one of these? Any other lovers of the unloved store brands?
Of course J.C. Penney didn't make the guns - they had a major builder make them and put the house brand on them. This tends to keep the prices down, another thing that appeals to me.
Here's my latest - it showed up on Facebook and was largely ignored by the AK/AR/XD crowd. Its the first I've seen - a Montgomery Ward Hawthorne Model 760, caliber .30/06. For the price of a Ruger LCP I brought it home.

It came with the rings but no scope, so I put this Nikon 2-7 on it.

Its been used, but not abused. The stock will finish up nicely, and it looks like a decent piece of wood. I'm sure this was somebody's deer and elk gun.

This is worth the price of admission - an FN Mauser Deluxe action. It is wonderfully smooth.

The bottom metal is actually metal.

Bolt knob is a nice touch.

It has iron sights, because in 1955 you'd have iron sights. And tail fins.

I'm sure the checkering is machine done, but it still looks good.


Men were men then. This is all the recoil pad a 1955 man needed.

And all this for next to nothing, because this is stamped on the barrel.

I just picked it up today, so I haven't shot it yet. I need a scratchy red flannel shirt and an appropriate chapeau, and maybe a pipe.
Anybody ever had one of these? Any other lovers of the unloved store brands?