I'm getting really confused here, guys; kindly forgive me.
Fred Jensen in Melita, Manitoba, had reamers for the 6.5/.284W actually produced, in his shop and in use before .284 ammo hit the hardware stores. Fred was Danish-Canadian and utterly hated anything Swedish; for Norma to put their name on what he regarded as HIS cartridge would have been a terrible blow. Fred would have seen it as just one more manifestation of "the slimy Swede"; he never did forgive them for April 9, 1940.
Some of you guys might have liked Fred, provided that you didn't kill each other. He was irascible and crotchety at the best of times and got even more opinionated as he progressed through most of his 90s. The only problem was that Fred could always PROVE that he was right. He was an absolute perfectionist and he built some of the most accurate hunting rifles ever put together in Western Canada. Some folks still miss him.
Anyway, I prefer to think of that cartridge as the 6.5 Jensen.
And anoher old development is the original 6.5/'06:the fabled .256 Newton which was chambered in that incredible Buffalo Newton rifle. The .256 was the only one of Charles Newton's cartridges which could be made from existing brass. In 1912 it was a real hot-rock. Newton and Sir Charles Ross were friends and Newton's wonderful rifle was basically a '98 Mauser action but it had a Mark III Ross type of bolt-head: 7 lugs arranged 4 on the left, 3 on the right. And it also had a Ross ejector and so got away from the split lefthand lug of the Mauser series. Winchester later stole this ejector from the Newton, put it on a modified P-17 action (which is pure Mauser for the most part) and the Winchester Models 54 and 70 were born, one following the other.
Might be fun to build up a new .256 Newton, just to remember the guy who started it all.
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