I've long been an admirer of the Favorites even before,in my teens, I received JJ Grant's Boys Single Shot Rifles for Christmas of 1968. Now, there's a book with a lot of miles on it. I have a handful of Stevens boy's rifles including 2 Favorites, a 25 and a 32 along with a limited supply of the ammunition I managed to scrounge in the late 60's/early 70's.
I still have one sealed box of Winchester 25 shorts out of the 3 I found at Thorne's Hardware in Saint John, I think 1942 was the last year Winchester loaded it,1969 was when I cleaned them out.
Whenever I notice that Mr Skwerl has posted, I am not far behind. You have a really fine collection and I will be following this thread with great interest.
Thank you
Thank you Serle for the thread. Not exactly a Favorite but I just bought a Stevens Model 45 in 25-20 to compliment my Stevens Favorite .22. I guess my love of the rifle started early as it was the .22 I learned to shoot with way back when I was 6 in 1957. The old gun languished without rifling for over 50 years until last month when I had the barrel relined. The gunsmith who did the work brought out the Model 45 I guess knowing I couldn’t resist.
skwerl - so far as you know - does "Model 1915" stamped on upper tang mean it was made in 1915 or later? There is no SVG or SV marks on this one - a letter "I" in a circle on the 10:30 receiver flat, and letter "P" in a circle on the barrel about 9:00 - directions are from when looking from the rear.
skwerl - so far as you know - does "Model 1915" stamped on upper tang mean it was made in 1915 or later? There is no SVG or SV marks on this one - a letter "I" in a circle on the 10:30 receiver flat, and letter "P" in a circle on the barrel about 9:00 - directions are from when looking from the rear.
I know this thread is for the Favorite model but I am trying to find smokeless loads for my Stevens Model 44 in 25-20SS. There seems to be a lot of conflicting information out there about using smokeless and it seems odd to me that Stevens would have produced these rifles to only use black powder after 1900.