JLouis wrote on Feb 16
th, 2019 at 12:52pm:
Was not Hubalek just a barrel maker and George Worn the one who designed and made the action.
Hubalek's business was buying, selling, and tuning pianos. But he was also a trained tool maker and was excellent at gunsmithing in general. He did learn the art of barrel making from Pope, so made great barrels. Hubalek started his gun business around the mid 1920's and advertised himself as the ".22 Caliber Specialist" His 8 groove barrels were some of the finest .22 barrels made. Hubalek also designed and built his own telescope which he sold from his shop.
In addition to his skills in gunsmithing, he was one of the finest shots in the US in his time, and broke all of Doc Hudson's records also. He could shoot with any of the best and hold his own.
As far as I know nobody has determined whether he or fellow New Yorker George Worn was the first to offer up their version of the striker conversion for Ballard rifles. Both specialized in Ballard rifles for schuetzen, and both offered the striker systems. It's guessed that they also worked closely together, and may have shared the casting costs, or machine work on the newly cast Ballard receivers they offered.
According to Dutcher's book, some witnesses say they recall Worn bringing breech blocks to Hubalek's shop. So if these were completed breech blocks, then Worn may well be the source, and should be credited with their design, or at least the building of these striker actions. Either way, the two men seemed to have a close working relationship.
But to really give credit where it's due we need to remember that Freund offered a striker conversion for the Ballard action in 1879, well before either Worn or Hubalek offered theirs.