I took it home, cleaned it up as best I could, and started looking for replacement wood for it. I checked to see what it would cost to bring the gun back to it's former glory, and it would be three or four times what it's worth, so I decided it was going to be a shooter or a wallhanger. I didn't want to try and use solder to fill in the pits because of putting any heat to the barrel, so I filled in the worst of them with JB Weld. I took the rear sight, which wasn't correct and was missing parts, so I trimmed it down, rounded it off and then cold blued it and made a sight blank out of it. For a rear sight I used a Lyman tang I had lying around.
I slugged the barrel to see what I was working with, and like many other early .38-55's I heard about, it's oversize, running .378", so I decided to take a chance and shoot it at the range as it is, and was very surprised. I used Winchester factory ammo, 255 grain rounds and at 25 yards I got a group of about 1-inch, the 50 yard group ran two inches on my homemade bison target. I have tried to get in touch with the last owner so I can get some history of the gun, and I decided to write to the Cody Museum to see what they have, still waiting back on the letter, but one thing I can promise, this gun will see the woods come hunting season, I can guarantee that. Next week the hunting licenses come out and I hope to get a doe tag, would love to take a whitetail with this gun.








