Don Gill
Howdy Don,
I am certainly no expert on Johnson rifles, but I have some. I have been trying to do some homework on mine too. If you have access to some old American Rifleman magazines you may be able to dig up some info. The Camp Perry results generally got listed in the October edition of the magazine. Try going through as many as you can. You may find match results in any month though. Being from Connecticut, as was Johnson, he could have shot at a variety of places including Sea Girt in New Jersey. I found results of Sea Girt matches in August 1933, along with a photo of Eric Johnson standing beside Charlie Johnson, with Charlie holding the Eric Johnson Straight Pull rifle that I believe is the one a few feet away from me as I type this. It is kinda cool to find a picture of your rifle from many years ago in an American Rifleman!
A guy who goes by 40ezxs has a LOT of shooting experience, and sometimes posts on the Eric Johnson threads. EXTREMELY helpful guy. If he does not post here in a day or two, I would recommend starting a thread about John Sullivan asking for any info anyone could provide.
It is a small world. The rifle that Tom C. is talking about in the first post in this thread, is sitting beside the Straight Pull as I type this. He listed the serial number on the reciever. About a year later I started a thread and asked him about it. Same rifle. It is a Remington 37 that was built for a guy named Charley Whipple of Pennsylvania. 40ezxs had shot against Whipple in the 1950's. Whipple took a job at Winchester shortly after Johnson built his Rem 37.
I found in the October 1946 American Rifleman, that Whipple often took the Rem 37 AND a Winchester 52 to matches and shot them in different events.
I hope you will enjoy the rifle and the search for info. I don't know if Sullivan was famous or not. But if he was, it is cool having a functional piece of history.
How does the 52 shoot, at what distance, with what ammo?
Greg
Howdy Don,
I am certainly no expert on Johnson rifles, but I have some. I have been trying to do some homework on mine too. If you have access to some old American Rifleman magazines you may be able to dig up some info. The Camp Perry results generally got listed in the October edition of the magazine. Try going through as many as you can. You may find match results in any month though. Being from Connecticut, as was Johnson, he could have shot at a variety of places including Sea Girt in New Jersey. I found results of Sea Girt matches in August 1933, along with a photo of Eric Johnson standing beside Charlie Johnson, with Charlie holding the Eric Johnson Straight Pull rifle that I believe is the one a few feet away from me as I type this. It is kinda cool to find a picture of your rifle from many years ago in an American Rifleman!
A guy who goes by 40ezxs has a LOT of shooting experience, and sometimes posts on the Eric Johnson threads. EXTREMELY helpful guy. If he does not post here in a day or two, I would recommend starting a thread about John Sullivan asking for any info anyone could provide.
It is a small world. The rifle that Tom C. is talking about in the first post in this thread, is sitting beside the Straight Pull as I type this. He listed the serial number on the reciever. About a year later I started a thread and asked him about it. Same rifle. It is a Remington 37 that was built for a guy named Charley Whipple of Pennsylvania. 40ezxs had shot against Whipple in the 1950's. Whipple took a job at Winchester shortly after Johnson built his Rem 37.
I found in the October 1946 American Rifleman, that Whipple often took the Rem 37 AND a Winchester 52 to matches and shot them in different events.
I hope you will enjoy the rifle and the search for info. I don't know if Sullivan was famous or not. But if he was, it is cool having a functional piece of history.
How does the 52 shoot, at what distance, with what ammo?
Greg