This is the second P. Bergersen rifle in .40-90 I have seen. I owned the other, it was a found item by me at an estate sale, and went to a collection in I believe Massachusetts when I sold it. It was beat much worse than yours and had been cut off to 20 inches by a later owner to use as a ranch rifle/saddle gun. Twenty years ago when these weren't worth nearly what they are today, mine, with a broken stock, bolts through the wrist, cut off barrel to 20 inches, buttstock spattered with blood stains, and forend worn nearly through from saddle horn wear sold for $1250. It paid for John King to build my first target quality single shot, a rolling block .45-90 with a badger barrel and Axtell sights, which I still own and shoot today. This was one of the best things I ever did in gun sales/trades, as it got me shooting single shots. Peder Bergersen was an immigrant, worked in the Chicago area, went to Cheyenne in the buffalo era, and I believe finished his career in Denver, maybe with Freund or Petersen? I can't remember exactly. This is the real deal, a buffalo era rifle, tied to a frontier gunsmith heavily entrenched in the buffalo trade. Nice piece of history. I would do a tasteful repair of the tang, and age it to match the rest of the gun. I would in no way do a refinish of the wood in any way, would do no polish or refinish of the metal. Anything of that sort would drastically drop the value. It's value is as a worn, authentic piece of 1870's American West history. Any "restoration" detracts from that value. If you are intent on having a shooter, I would sell this, as it is probably worth more than a new Shiloh Sharps, and purchase a new, easy to shoot caliber, accurate and guaranteed Shiloh. That is what I did (sell original, build new target rifle), and I have absolutely no regrets about it. dave
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