Can you help me ID these pistols? Are they worth anything?

Bush Man

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These pistols were inherited in some way or another, and we think they are mostly junkers but wasn't too sure. If you could tell me a rough value, don't worry you won't insult me if its low.

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1911
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To: Safety police... I realize the hammer is cocked, we couldn't find the key and I was checking the slide and It cocked. Found key after

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We are just trying to get a rough value to get rid of them. If we can get a couple bucks for them, its better than throwing them in the lake.

Ya those grips arn't exactly my taste.
And the stevens sure has a weird shape, btw its a .22
 
The Hungarian .32 is a type widely issued by the Germans during WW2. It will have some collector value. $250? The top break hammerless .38 is in much better shape than usual, although its value is limited, perhaps $100. Both of these are 12(6) prohibs. Apart from the grips, the 1911A1 looks respectable enough, and should not be hard to sell in the $400 range. The Stevens single shot target pistol is interesting, and would be good for recreational target shooting, and probably would be of interest to a Stevens collector. Cannot suggest a value. None of these are junk, and should all be saleable.
 
Aside from the 1911 I think the values listed are on the high end. These do have a number of dings that bring down any collector value. While the revolver looks to be in good shape that gun is not exactly desirable.
 
A dealer cannot buy 12(6) handguns, they cannot become the property of the business, but a dealer can sell them as an agent of the registered owner.
 
If only that stevens was south of the border, I would jump on it in an instant! LOL
In any case, NONE of those guns are "junk"
What the market value is in Canada is another matter.
 
Gun values are like book values, in that condition is almost everything until you get to the really valuable-in-any-condition. I'm afraid yours don't fall into that category. The Stevens and the Colt probably carry the most value. The Colt is a military issue pistol and that carries more value these days. I can't quite remember the maker of the grips with the target on them, I'm afraid. That and the Hungarian M37 are both "prohibited" guns. If you can get the number off the lock cylinder, and call Master, they can probably send you keys.
 
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