marlinguy wrote on Dec 10
th, 2016 at 5:58pm:
Most the early Stevens were built by others. Cataract or Malcolm, so they used their mounts...
You've been grossly mislead (perhaps by some of the malarkey about Stevens made up out of whole cloth by John Campbell?). Stevens purchased the assets of the defunct Cataract Co. at a bankruptcy sale in 1901, so it would have been impossible for Cataract to have mfg. Stevens scopes, and by mid-1902 were advertising their new scopes in Shooting & Fishing. The first (lavish) Stevens' catalog appeared in 1903, which you can buy in a cheap Cornell reprint (which doesn't begin to match the beauty of the original, however).
"Favorite" was the only model name ever applied to the long scope, and although its mounts went through several improvements over the years, "No. 1" was the only designation applied to them from 1903 until the last catalog under Savage ownership, which you can confirm in Cornell's reprints of these later catalogs. The ends of the adjustment screws on my No. 1 were so "un-flat" they worked like cams until I squared them off, and the lack of a binding screw in the rear mount means they can be accidentally moved.
I don't doubt Stevens scopes wound up in Malcolm mounts, either because the buyer preferred a fixed rather than sliding mount, or just wanted to use mounts he already owned; likewise, you see Feckers in Stevens mounts, Unertls in Lyman mounts, etc. But there's no reason to believe Malcolm ever
supplied mounts to Stevens when Stevens was mfg. their own in several variations, and in fact the Malcolm Co. was on a downhill trajectory by the time Stevens introduced their first scopes. The best "asset" Stevens acquired in that bankruptcy auction was the services of F. L. Smith, the most talented scope builder of his time, so they most certainly had no need to "borrow" from the fading Malcolm Co.