canoeguy
US Veteran
My Dad recently moved in with me, he got laid off from his job of 16 years without so much as a "Thank You", and found he could not live on Social Security alone. He's in good health, but no one wants to hire an 82 year old guy.
So, being in good health and in need of something to do each day, he started looking for a lady friend, a companion, someone to spend time with each day. He found a delightful widow woman who was also seeking companionship, so they spend most of each day together, playing cards and shooting the breeze. He mentioned to her my interest in firearms, so she dragged out for me to examine a 1929 vintage Winchester Model 94 in 30/30 caliber that belonged to her Father. He bought it new in 1929, and hunted hard with it, in the Pennsylvania woods. It is still mechanically sound, with a nice clean bore but shows evidence of many a hunt. It has a neat looking ladder type rear sight, almost like a military sight. There are two holes in the reciever where someone once mounted a peep reciver sight.
Here's some pics:
Left side of rifle:
Ladder sight:
Left side of reciever:
The two holes at the rear I'm sure came from a reciver sight, the forward hole I'm not sure about. My 1949 Vintage Model 94 doesn't have a hole there, is that another drilled hole, maybe for a scope mount?
Anyway, the rifle will stay in the lady's family, going to her son when she passes, but it is a neat piece of Pennsylvania hunting history. I had a fun time handling it....
So, being in good health and in need of something to do each day, he started looking for a lady friend, a companion, someone to spend time with each day. He found a delightful widow woman who was also seeking companionship, so they spend most of each day together, playing cards and shooting the breeze. He mentioned to her my interest in firearms, so she dragged out for me to examine a 1929 vintage Winchester Model 94 in 30/30 caliber that belonged to her Father. He bought it new in 1929, and hunted hard with it, in the Pennsylvania woods. It is still mechanically sound, with a nice clean bore but shows evidence of many a hunt. It has a neat looking ladder type rear sight, almost like a military sight. There are two holes in the reciever where someone once mounted a peep reciver sight.
Here's some pics:
Left side of rifle:

Ladder sight:


Left side of reciever:
The two holes at the rear I'm sure came from a reciver sight, the forward hole I'm not sure about. My 1949 Vintage Model 94 doesn't have a hole there, is that another drilled hole, maybe for a scope mount?

Anyway, the rifle will stay in the lady's family, going to her son when she passes, but it is a neat piece of Pennsylvania hunting history. I had a fun time handling it....