I beleive that the Jordan buck was taken with a 25-20.
When my late mother was in a care home there was an old native cowboy from the Chilcotin in there too, always wore his cowboy hat. His name was Dave.
"Dave," I said one day when I was visiting, "You ever shoot moose?"
"Oh yeah," Dave replied. he was a man of few words. "Shoots lots moose."
"How about bears, did you shoot any bears?"
"Yup."
"How about grizzly bears?"
"Yup. Shoot lots grizzly bears."
"So what did you use? A 30-30?" I asked, assuming that he was using a lever action saddle gun.
"Nope. 25/35. Shoot 'em right here," Dave replied, pointing to his side right under the armpit.
It's old-fashioned, it's obsolete, it's RIMMED fer Gawdssakes, and it's the one Winchester cartridge I find interesting.
It deserved a lot better than it got, but got shoved into the shadows by the .30-'06 and the eternal quest for "More POWERRR".
It is an intensely PRACTICAL cartridge and still quite useful today. There was also a rimless version put out by Remington; originally called the .25-35 Rimless, it was later renamed the .25 Remington. Worked fine in all those pumps and Model 8 semi-autos. Loading data is identical.
I was pallbearer for an old family friend named Eddie Schmaus. Eddie supported the rest of the family (brothers, sisters, parents, etc) through the Dirty Thirties with his trap line and a little (a lot) of poaching. He had a Remington slide-action and one box of .25 ammo, sighted in, won a rifle match, took 16 animals for meat, had to use a second round on one an still had 1 round left over. Those old-time survival hunters knew their stuff. They HAD to: no Welfare department.
.25-35 would have been equally useful and would have done the same job. Eddie was just using the rimless version.
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My son shot his first three big game animals, Sitka Blacktail deer, using a beat up 25-35 Model 94, when he was just ten years old. I got it from an old-timer in Whitehorse, who told me it came up the Chillkoot Pass in 1899.
The stock was really beat up and had some deep gouges, the bluing all gone, and the bore dark. I shortened the stock and installed a recoil pad for him, and we headed to the range with some CIL Dominion ammo. It shot so good, I bought a set of dies and started loading for it. He became quite proficient with it, and we went to Chicagoff Island the next year to hunt with some friends of ours there. The ironic thing was that he was the only person to bag a deer on that hunt.
Still use the same load in that rifle, 117 gr Hornady round nose, ahead of 25 gr of IMR 3031. Had Bill Leeper correct the headspace in it a few years ago, and it still goes to the range regularly.
Now his boys are lined up to use it.
Ted



























