Howdy! Jim Irwin here. Given the moniker "Cannonball" in California. Have been a Hawken nut since 1974, when, while looking to buy a TC "Hawken", I chanced upon The Longrifle Shop in Richardson, Texas. In the wall I saw end instantly fell in love/lust with the authentic Hawken Rocky Mountain rifle. I paid more for a kit of parts and semi-shaped plain walnut stock than I would have for a completed TC new in the box. Parts from Cherry Corners were pretty nearly perfect replicas of the original. Cherry Corners sold to Ithaca, which sold to Navy Arms, which sold to Uberti/Western Arms. Anyways the same basic kit in several names stayed around a long time, and still survives. In 1978 I was approached to make a Hawken using a kit of parts from The Hawken Shop in St Louis. Art Ressel had bought the old Hawken show "lock, stock, and barrel" with surviving tooling, patterns and who knows what else and was producing completely authentic parts, with barrels by Bill Large, and with a tight tiger striped maple stock. Built it for the guy, who came and shot with us for a while, then dropped out. I called him to check on him and he offered me the gun for what he had in it. It is now a sacred family heirloom.
Point i that a true Hawken is a thing of rare beauty all unto itself. I find it a shame that so many importers/makers chose to sully the name Hawken using it on what they produced, even though many are well enough made and shoot well enough. The closest thing to true is the Lyman Great Plains rifle design. Browning had one for a while that was pretty close, too.
Yes, I am a Hawken biggot!
I have held/fondled/ embraced a few originals, too. Nothing else quite like them!
Jim Irwin
aka Cannonball