Many High Standard owners are curious about the history of the guns they own.
Many want to know when the gun was made, what configuration it was when it left
the factory, and perhaps where it was shipped to. In addition, people looking at
a gun that might be “rare” and thus perhaps more valuable than others want
verification of the authenticity of the gun.
Most people are not aware of the
amount of work it may entail to perform the search, due to the types of records
available, the types of entries, and the lack of completeness of the records.
For the past several decades John Stimson has searched the High Standard
company's microfilm records obtained from the ATF. He has done this at no charge
to the requestor. More recently, Steve Schrott has taken up the task. He can be
contacted at SSHISTAND65@GMAIL.COM.
The following information is presented to
you, the reader, to give a better appreciation of the raw data they must review
to give you the data you request. Attached are samples of High Standard record
pages found over the decades of the company's existence.
These samples give a
good idea of what the researchers have to work with. There are lots of problems
with the records. There are blank lines, missing pages, and for the Letter
Series era there is only every other page recorded. The handwriting is often
not very legible. It is still the best we have to work with, and answers most of
the questions we have. But it will never be perfect.
The daily record pages are
in much better order than the invoices. There are over 200,000 pages of invoices and many
are unreadable. The earliest invoices in the record are 1966. We hope this gives people an idea of the task involved for the researcher when a person makes a serial number lookup request.
Click on photo to enlarge
|
1938 Letter models and no barrel length and we only have every other page. |
|
1948 Record pages were typed, therefore hard to change mistakes and sometimes same Ser # shows it shipped more than one time?? |
|
1959 Record pages were back to handwritten entries with blank lines so some Ser #s may never have shipped. Account See was large Gov Orders. |
|
1971 Record shows many Ser #s missing that may not have shipped |
|
1984 Record is all handwritten and shows V serial suffixed guns from defective stock
|
|
1984 Invoice shows all guns at that time were labeled Visual Impair at top of invoice. |
|
1972 Typical Invoice copy. Over 200,000 pages all after 1966 and many are unreadable. |
Thanks to John and Steve for your time and effort. Much appreciated!
ReplyDeleteJay Johnson