22 Marlin Model 39A

I inherited a model 39 Mountie from my grandfather, manufactured in 1954. At the time (1964) I wished it were a full rifle, not a 20" carbine. Good thing I never acted on that whim.

My grandfather got in on trade, along with a Winchester model 12, 20 ga, for a .36 caliber flintlock squirrel rifle he inherited from his grandfather. It was converted to use a percussion cap, but the side plate lock was still there, sans frizzen.
 
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I found a 39A with Skinner sights for a reasonable price several years ago.
Lots of fun to shoot. It hasn't been to the rang yet this year but that
will change this week, or next.
 
I have a 1964 model. The rifle was in superb shape. It came with a vintage Marlin scope on it. It was nice to have the vintage scope, but I did not shoot well with it. I kept it, but bought a Nikon Prostaff Rimfire scope. I shoot much better with the new scope. Here are some before and after pictures.
 

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I bought each one of my 3 kids a Marlin Mountie on the day they were born. After they learned how to shoot open sights well, I mounted an old Redfield 3/4" 22 scope on them. I stumbled onto a Marlin 39 carbine a few years back. This is not a Mountie. The carbines were only produced for a few years in the 70's IIRC. They had a 3/4 length magazine tube. It sleeps under the seat of my pickup. I need to put it in a case one of these days.
 
30-30remchester; I agree with you on the old guns. They are works of art. I'm sure some high velocity stuff was shot though the old one at some point in it's life, but no more. In fact, I don't think I have shot the older 39 since I got the 39A in 1987.

The only part that broke on the original 39 was the hammer return spring. Since this is an early rifle, it has the early flat spring style. It took me over 20 years to find the correct replacement. The hammer works fine now, but again, I don't think I will shoot it all that often.
 
Way back when, in the late 1950s-early 1960, my best friend had a Marlin 39A. I was very jealous as I was stuck with a Remington bolt .22RF. A few years ago I found a Marlin 39 Carbine in a local shop...........it is mine now. Came with a Weaver receiver sight and I shoot the dickens out of it. It is death on ground squirrels in the Wife's garden. Not jealous anymore.........mine is better than his.
 

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I still have a couple M97 Marlins. Standard Vel only.
One I got a very nice deal on as it had been cut back an inch and relined. But a nice job of it.
On top of that it's a pistol grip, 1/2 oct bbl, 1/2 mag w/Lyman tang sight and 2 leaf fold down bbl sight.
No finish left, just the case hardened frame worn to a bright plated appearance from handling.
Everyone passed it up being standard vel only and cut and relined I guess. But a pistol grip deluxe 1/2 oct with those sights,,it's coming home!

It's a pre 1910(?) as it has the ejector/spring that simply falls out of it's cut out the frame once the rifle is TD and the bolt removed. They fixed that with the later style ejector that has 2 small screws on the left outside of the frame to hold them in position.
Repro ejectors for this old style are avail. Check any of the old rifles to make sure the ejector is in place before buying. Many are missing. I have two in that catagory!

Check the bolt locking surface too for cracks. It's the sharp 90* interior corner the locking surface makes with the bolt body that is the real weak spot.
A simple engineering principle that got overlooked. The first Model 39's had the same bolt and the same cracking problem if HS ammo is used.
Marlin made the machine cut w/a small radius to the corner to reinforce the area to prevent the issue in the 39A
 
I had one in the 60s. Shot a lot of small game with it. Even a goose one time. Had to trade it in the 70s for a Marlin 30-30. Had a family and needed more meat. On my list to get one but they are $600 + around here.
 
I think Marlin .22lr are often overlooked by shooters as they are not as expensive as some other brands. I have a Model 60 (they have been making that model since 1960!) that is unbelievably accurate. Many folks that have them feel that they are more accurate than the Ruger10-22. A new model 60 and a Bushnell rim fire scope and you are good to go for less than $250!
 
I have one as well. Golden 39A, it's a takedown from about 1968 or so. My Dad gave it to me and I learned to shoot with that rifle. Amazingly accurate for a lever gun.
 
A Golden 39A was my first firearm. I bought it at a hardware store in 1959 or 1960 when I was 16 using my newspaper/lawn mowing savings.
First chance I had, I took it to my grandparents' house in the country, walked down the road to their neighbor's house to show it off to Jack, the neighbors' son, who was my age and a hunter. He saw me coming and met me by the mailbox at the road. We heard a squirrel fussing, spotted it on the side of a tree about 100 yards down the driveway. Jack said "Throw one down there and scare him." With my first shot, factory sight setting, I knocked that squirrel off the side of the tree trunk at ~100 yds. Jack was amazed. I smiled, letting him think I was Hopalong Cassidy or Roy Rogers or some such.
I loaned it to a friend in the '90's and lost it for 20 years, got it back and still have it. How that happened is another story I've related elsewhere on this forum.

Other than a heavy hammer fall, it is slick and sweet, feels like a real rifle, not a .22 toy.
Question for the guys with peep sights: Did you have to drill and tap the tang, or drill any additional holes to mount it?
 
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I passed up a NIB Mountie a few years ago for $250. I am still kicking myself.
I have an unfired Golden 39 upstairs I bought new. I plan on passing it to my daughter when I pass. I can't bring myself to shoot it for fear of banging it up.
I bought a Henry for shooting. It's a fine rifle, but it's no Marlin.
 
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