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Legacy Member
Where are all the Winchester 1895 Contract Rifles?
This is something I have been wondering for a long time...
Where are all the Winchester 1895 Russian contract rifles in 7.62x45R?
I mean why aren't they showing up more than they do? They made something like 300,000 of them for the Tsar's army, yet the are as rare as hens teeth.
They show up at crazy prices now, ranging from $2000 to $20,000 USD. As seen by the last sale of one at James D Julia Auction.
Are there crates somewhere in Russia
or a former soviet satellite country?
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10-12-2015 10:12 PM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
It would make sense, unless they were melted down. Apparently at least one third of the Ross Rifles in the world were sent over to the USSR as well, and apparently were rechambered to 7.62x54r. I wonder what happened to those as well.
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Legacy Member
Interesting, I've never heard about the Ross rifles until now.
There are probably crates just like this...

Maybe most were abused and destroyed/sporterized after ww1.
I have never seen a picture of them in use after ww1, which is strange.
The Russians arent ones to destroy or get rid of guns, they seem to pack them in grease and bury them in mines and such. Maybe there still out there.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
pcvando
There are probably crates just like this...
There was one of those cases out here in RCMP hands with carbines marked to BCP...new in the crate, never to see outside hands. I saw it and have no idea what happened to it.
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Legacy Member
There was one of those cases out here in RCMP hands with carbines marked to BCP...new in the crate, never to see outside hands. I saw it and have no idea what happened to it.
They probably went home with an officer.
Actually more likely they were destroyed to "not fall into the hands of criminals."
Because all drive by shootings are done with an 1894 Winchester in 30-30.
Now they are melting all those hi powers. Damn gov.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
pcvando
Actually more likely they were destroyed to "not fall into the hands of criminals."
I'm very certain that's what will eventually happen. I saw them in the lockup and discussed it with an old friend running that lockup. He basicly told me that very thing would happen.
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Legacy Member
296,000 Winchester 95s were delivered to Imperial Russia
, which I guess in the grand scheme of things isn't really a lot.
Some would have been chewed up in WW1,
then more in the Russian Civil War,
more again in the Finnish
Civil War, (Finland had 1700 on hand after the Winter War, and disposed of the last remaining 503 in 1950)
the Soviets sold 9000 of them to the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War (most of the examples we see in private hands now have come from Spain),
And more again chewed up in WW2 being used by mlitia, partisans, or second line troops.
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Thank You to fernleaf For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
I'm very certain that's what will eventually happen. I saw them in the lockup and discussed it with an old friend running that lockup. He basicly told me that very thing would happen.
Damn. How long ago was this?
---------- Post added at 12:21 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:20 AM ----------

Originally Posted by
fernleaf
296,000 Winchester 95s were delivered to Imperial
Russia
, which I guess in the grand scheme of things isn't really a lot.
Some would have been chewed up in WW1,
then more in the Russian Civil War,
more again in the
Finnish
Civil War, (Finland had 1700 on hand after the Winter War, and disposed of the last remaining 503 in 1950)
the Soviets sold 9000 of them to the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War (most of the examples we see in private hands now have come from Spain),
And more again chewed up in WW2 being used by mlitia, partisans, or second line troops.
Thanks for the numbers, maybe there aren't many left at all.
But why do you think the prices for them are so high? I guess supply and demand.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
pcvando
Damn. How long ago was this?
I'd have to guess a bit, but back about '98? Friend of mine had quit the army and gone into the AGs office working with the CFOs office...he handled FAC issue and firearms disposal at that time. We went upstairs in the RCMP building on Nanaimo St in Victoria and while there he let me paw through the seized stuff...bit of everything. He showed me the mythical case that I'd been told about 20 years previous and it was still as described. I picked up the same mint carbine everyone else had handled, the others were still unhandled since packing. He stated flatly that these would never se auction and were destined for the chipper, just exactly when was always the question...
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Contributing Member
They fit both in the collection of Winchester collectors, aswell as collectors of Soviet arms, aswell as for collectors of US produced military guns, as well as a collection of WWI guns, plus of course also for those who collect different mechanical systems of military arms. Therefore the demand is quite high and most would love to have one of these.
It's said there is still a huge stock of those somewhere in Ukraine (as with the early WWI Colt M1911 Russian
contract pistols), but of course this is only hear-say and no idea if they are really there. And if they were there, with the current situation in this area, it is highly uncertain that they'll surface to the collector market.
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