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- Jun 17, 2019
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Good observations. Very thoughtful. I wonder who the actual owner(s) are? Most people don't know they had, at least at one time, a business that handled the full-auto type unmentionables. I know for sure I won't ever get there now in person; at one time, maybe, but not now. Times really do change but I wish them the best, as with all ML vendors and makers. Imagine the kerfuffle if they ever decided to liquidate and have a huge auction!I visited the actual store a couple of years ago as it was only an hour away from an N-SSA skirmish. You could tell the place had seen better days. While the front of the store is kind of cool from an antiques perspective the store really has the aura of a junk store. Turner Kirkland died in 1997 and the store looks like not much has been done with it since then. Most things that are labeled still have labels that were obviously typed out on a typewriter. Very little modern inventory is on display for customers. I don't know what the back-end operations look like.
The old car museum was kind of neat (and the reconstructed gunsmith shop) but clearly this is something that someone set up decades ago and now it's just been sitting with little attention.
I had only known of DGW from their huge catalog in the past, so I was kind of shocked when I saw it in person. I was expecting a more modern, kept-up store.
I don't really blame the store; I think this hobby is fading and it's hard for vendors to keep afloat. Seems like not a single store anywhere has a full inventory of reproduction arms available anymore. Try to find any store that carries a full like of Civil War reproduction guns anymore. Nobody has them. I heard Chiappa won't do less than a 300-piece run. What vendor can afford that anymore?