I recently acquired an 1894 Winchester saddle ring carbine in .30WCF. It dates to 1915 and is in great condition apart from the fact that some moron hand polished ALL!! the patina and remaining blue from the receiver. When I picked it up I noticed the DCP crossed flags just forward of the Winchester barrel proof. Stocks are gumwood and surprisingly completely unmarked and barrel and mag tube have around 90% blue remaining, bore is perfect.
I poked around online and found two different schools of thought as to where they came from. Apparently in 1914 the British Royal Navy purchased 5,000 94 IN .30WCF and 20,000 92 carbines in 44WCF. Canadian inspectors went to Winchester to inspect and stamp them. The story goes they were shipped to Halifax Naval Yard for delivery to the Royal Navy. They were used on mine sweepers and such for the duration of the war. There is a documented account of a British seaman opening fire with a Winchester at a German sub running on the surface at 150 yards.
This author claims Canada never purchased any lever rifles at this time.
Another author claimed that the rifles were purchased by Canada and used for guarding some federal government sites and by prison guards. I tend to go with the British Navy version as the author has paper work for some 2800 1894 carbines being sold as surplus in 1920. Anyone have any info on these rifles?
I poked around online and found two different schools of thought as to where they came from. Apparently in 1914 the British Royal Navy purchased 5,000 94 IN .30WCF and 20,000 92 carbines in 44WCF. Canadian inspectors went to Winchester to inspect and stamp them. The story goes they were shipped to Halifax Naval Yard for delivery to the Royal Navy. They were used on mine sweepers and such for the duration of the war. There is a documented account of a British seaman opening fire with a Winchester at a German sub running on the surface at 150 yards.
This author claims Canada never purchased any lever rifles at this time.
Another author claimed that the rifles were purchased by Canada and used for guarding some federal government sites and by prison guards. I tend to go with the British Navy version as the author has paper work for some 2800 1894 carbines being sold as surplus in 1920. Anyone have any info on these rifles?




























































