It was in part because it successfully became such an admired cultural icon that the post-64 “improved” model was such an unmitigated disaster and did such long lasting damage to the reputation of Winchester and the Model 70. The Winchester Model 70 (pre-64) was not just one of the best and most practical bolt action rifles ever created: it became a cultural icon.
The way things turned out I wouldn’t buy a Model 70 with the original Controlled Feed action until a full forty-five years later, but when I did it was a Super Grade (of course). The original Model 70 had ceased production in 1963. So it was that by the time I’d graduated college, started in my first job, and moved to a place where hunting was possible, I discovered to my chagrin that the Winchester Model 70 of Jack O’Connor and Prince Abdorreza fame was no longer made, but instead there was a “new” Model 70 that really wasn’t the rifle its predecessor was.
It was in these articles and books that the Winchester Model 70 shone as the great American rifle, (with the Weatherby getting honorable mention also). So it was that during high school and college years it was the books and magazines I read, with articles by Jack O’Connor, Elgin Gates, Elmer Keith and others, featuring fascinating people, such as Prince Abdorreza of Iran, exotic places, and equally exotic game. But, instead of a real rifle and real hunting, there was “Guns and Ammo” magazine, and there were the books: books that would transport a teenage wannabe big game hunter to the heights of the Tien Shan, to Persia, and to the wilds of Africa.Įlgin Gates with a fine Argali ram, pictured in his book “Trophy Hunter in Asia”. So there was no way for a spotty English teenager to get started in big game hunting. There are no exotic Argali sheep to be found grazing along Pall Mall or The Strand: and if there were, and you wandered around Hyde Park with a loaded rifle looking to score yourself one of those majestic elk a British Bobby would soon be on the scene to put an end to your trophy hunting expedition. But in London there are no majestic elk wandering around in Hyde Park. London was home to some of the great gun and rifle-makers so there were gun shops one could visit and gawk at the gorgeous blued steel and fine walnut offerings on the gun racks. Living in London had some advantages, and some disadvantages. My own first connection with the Winchester Model 70 came in my teenage years growing up in London, England, in the early 1960’s. Advertisement for the Winchester Model 70 from September 1950.