My 40-year collection of Stevens ephemera stretches from the mid-1870s to the 1920s. Its mostly original, factory material in complete, undamaged condition, indeed, much of the post-1900 material is as-new and in original mailers. UNFORTUNATELY, the most recent catalog I have on hand is the Catalog # 51 I’ve written about in this installment. All the later material is stored in my way-off-site warehouse. The second caveat is that in my opinion based on my experience, Cornell’s Stevens catalogs specifically cannot be trusted as to covers, date assignments, and sometimes even contents. Now, on to BP’s post, in the order he presents the catalogs. Catalog # 50, 1902, 128 pages; Stevens-Pope section, no mention of 44-1/2 This is the R& R reprint which I bought some 20 years ago and still consider to be a true reproduction of the original. Catalog # 50, 1903, 142 pages; Stevens-Pope apparently not mentioned; complete 44-1/2 line This Cornell publication has the same cover as the R&R reprint of # 50 with the 1903 date added. It has the same content layout as my original late-1903 Catalog # 51 (Frost’s male hunter with dog cover) but is stated as being 6 pages longer. Catalog # 51, 1904, 140 pages; Pope Barrels and Stevens-Pope sections; 44-1/2 full line While I don’t accept the later-style cover - my experience is that the colored, illustrated covers form an unbroken if relatively short sequence - or the catalog number, Cornell may well have the date correct with the content a true reprint. Some dismiss this catalog’s date because it’s been widely publicized that Pope left Stevens in 1903. But in an interview published in the June, 1941 American Rifleman, Pope himself states that he left on December 31, 1905, only to wiped out in San Francisco on April 07, 1906. Catalog # 51, 1905, 141 pages; Stevens-Pope section, “new action” mentioned Other than “1905" being added, this Cornell cover is identical to that of my original (revised?) Catalog # 51. It’s a very complete posting of the Stevens line. Coming right after the Model 44 section, the “New Action” is surely the 44-1/2. My best guess is that this catalog’s date is actually early 1903 and that it’s the catalog that Red says my Catalog # 51 revises. (continued)
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