Habitually I engrave "Engraved by..." on the frame where the grip covers it.
Try carefully remove the grips, You might be lucky to see the origin.
I am strongly opposed to the "bench marks". Only real star engravers' marks get known.
The rest remains an enigma to the posterity.
WII veteran who was initially trained as a jeweler an
Ray,
At first the engraver's mark looks quite cryptic but if you use some imagination you can envision that the mark loosely resembles a Conestoga wagon. That is the mark of Vernon G. "Vern" Wagoner, late of Mesa Arizona.
Vern was a WWII veteran who was initially trained as a jeweler and watchmaker. He was a self taught gun engraver who settled in Mesa in 1974 and became a full time gun engraver.
I have not heard anything of Vern for many years but given the age of WWII veterans, he may not be extant.
Vern was featured on pages 163-164 of my 1980 book, American Engravers.
Your assume rodgerRay,
At first the engraver's mark looks quite cryptic but if you use some imagination you can envision that the mark loosely resembles a Conestoga wagon. That is the mark of Vernon G. "Vern" Wagoner, late of Mesa Arizona.
Vern was a WWII veteran who was initially trained as a jeweler and watchmaker. He was a self taught gun engraver who settled in Mesa in 1974 and became a full time gun engraver.
I have not heard anything of Vern for many years but given the age of WWII veterans, he may not be extant.
Vern was featured on pages 163-164 of my 1980 book, American Engravers.