Tell me about the Hartfords

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KT-45
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Posts: 81
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Tell me about the Hartfords

Post by KT-45 »

I'm looking at a Hartford 1892 in .357.

Anybody here shot one? What's the story on these rifles? Reliable?
"Mister, you ever seen what a Henry rifle can do in the hands of a man who knows how to use it?"
Hagler
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Re: Tell me about the Hartfords

Post by Hagler »

KT-45,

I got me one of them from forum member "Oregon 45". It is a Rossi 92, .357 Magnum, that EMF sells. Here is mine, after the original owner stripped the original color from the wood:

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Here it is, after Tycer & Yancey further customised it for me:

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I cut off the safety that came on the breechbolt, and I put in a steel magazine (replacing the plastic one) follower that I got from Steve Young. I lightened the ejector spring, and I lightend the hammer spring. So far, it eats .38 Specials, and .357 Magnums equally well. It likes my .357 Magnum Snap-Caps, too. I want to work over a few more things on the rifle, but it is really a good, reliable, well-made gun. These are all "standard mods" that many people do to the Rossi 92. The sights are nice, too. I am very pleased to own it.

I have a Browning B92, .44 Magnum, too. It & the Rossi/ Hartford feel very much alike, but with just a few, minor differences. The Rossi is not alone, since my B92 needed a little adjusting, too. Most of the modifications to the Browning are the same as those I did to my Rossi/ Hartford.

Shawn
"That's right, Billy, I'm good with it. I hit what I shoot at, and I'm fast!"-Lucas McCain, c1882.
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Tycer
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Re: Tell me about the Hartfords

Post by Tycer »

The Hartford was originally founded in 1810 in Hartford. A group of local merchants gathered in a Hartford inn and, with working capital of $15,000, founded the Hartford Fire Insurance Company. The company survived some of the greatest peacetime tragedies in America’s history. After a huge fire destroyed New York’s financial district in 1835, The Hartford’s president, Eliphalet Terry, used his personal wealth to cover all of the company’s damage claims. Other catastrophic events included the Chicago fire of 1871 and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire.
Over the years, the company has expanded its business. In 1913, the company formed The Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company to provide a wide variety of insurance coverage, including accident, automobile-liability, personal-damage, business-interruption and more. In 1959, the company expanded into the life-insurance business by acquiring The Columbian National Life Insurance Company in Boston, Massachusetts. In 1970, The Hartford was acquired by ITT Corporation for $1.4 billion, at the time the largest corporate takeover in American history. The combined company was renamed ITT-Hartford Group, Inc. In 1995, ITT decided to streamline its operations and release some of its subsidiaries, and The Hartford became an independent entity once again, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "HIG." Two years later, the company changed its name from ITT-Hartford Group, Inc. to The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., and also issued an IPO for its Hartford Life business under the ticker symbol “HLI.” In 2000, The Hartford reacquired all the shares of Hartford Life, and HLI was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange in 2006.
Notable historical figures have owned The Hartford’s policies, including Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate forces during the American Civil War, who purchased an insurance policy for his family home known as “Arlington,” which is now part of Arlington National Cemetery. In 1861, Abraham Lincoln purchased a policy to protect his home in Springfield, Illinois. In 1920, Babe Ruth purchased a “sickness policy” from The Hartford the same day he was traded from the Boston Red Sox to the New York Yankees. The policy protected his earnings if illness prevented him from playing during spring training or the regular season.
It's not clear exactly when the elk first appeared as the company’s logo. The oldest on record is the one that appears on the 1861 policy issued to Lincoln. But Hartford Stags might well have appeared earlier. An elk fording a stream is a natural symbol for a company named The Hartford.
The Lincoln stag, however, did not last long. By 1867, the Hartford stag began to resemble one popularized in an 1851 painting by Sir Edwin Landseer called “The Monarch of the Glen.” Intended for display in the Peer’s Refreshment Room of Parliament’s House of Commons, "Monarch of the Glen" caused a stir when MP's refused to pay Landseer’s price, claiming it was too steep and that they had not been properly consulted. Eventually, the painting was sold to a private collector. Nevertheless, once seen, few could forget the powerful image of such a magnificent animal. Reproductions soon appeared throughout the English-speaking world.
By 1875, the Hartford Stag clearly echoed the Monarch of the Glen – with one slight difference. The original Monarch appeared in a mountain setting, the company “monarch” near a stream. Apparently, the company wished to retain the hart-ford symbolism in its logo. But by 1890, even that last trace of the first Hartford Stag was discarded.
In that year, the company commissioned the John A. Lowell Company of Boston to create a large steel engraving of Landseer’s painting, and prints were distributed across the country through the company’s extensive agency force as the Hartford Stag.
Minor changes to the logo have been made through the years, generally to conform to current fashion and to printing requirements. The latter reason was the cause of the graphic logo version introduced in 1971.
In 2004, The Hartford purchased the Group Benefits Division of CNA Financial, based in Chicago, Illinois.
[edit]
Kind regards,
Tycer
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Tycer
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Re: Tell me about the Hartfords

Post by Tycer »

Yep, get it and the CD, ejector spring, and mag follower if yours is not metal.

from:

www.stevesgunz.com
Kind regards,
Tycer
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Hobie
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Re: Tell me about the Hartfords

Post by Hobie »

:lol: Dang Tycer! :lol:
Sincerely,

Hobie

"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
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