Have used the USPS to ship and receive muzzloading rifles, pistols and cap and ball revolvers without issue or complaint. Have never shipped or received an anvil using the USPS, so I can not comment on your misfortune.USPS could break an anvil. I would not trust them.
Phil Murhy...period full....StopAs long as the gun meets the ATFE's guidelines for it being an antique and it is unloaded, the post office will ship it.
The ATFE basically says any firearm made before 1898 that is muzzleloading or shoots a cartridge that is no longer available qualifies it as an antique.
They also include modern reproductions of these guns as qualifying as antiques.
That being said, although the Post Office will deliver the gun, if a State has laws about firearm sales and what a person has to do to receive a gun, those laws need to be met. If they are not met, the person receiving the gun can be in big trouble with the State officials.
Nothing to do with USPS and their handling of muzzleloader rifles and black powder handguns. Local non USPS issue.Phil Murhy...period full....Stop
They are all starting to suck. Just happens the post office is the worst.UPS hauls the packages between POs. USPS handles the deliveries. However, I have never had any damage shipping Priority. I wonder if UPS is more careful with the USPS packages.
I trust them more than UPS.USPS could break an anvil. I would not trust them.
True, unless the shipper builds a crappy wooden box, which has happened to me once. However, it still protected my rifle well enough to arrive undamaged but it wasn't worth the extra $100 I was charged. The only problem I have encountered happened at the local UPS store when the owner refused to ship a muzzle loading rifle I wanted to send. It was already boxed up with nothing written on it identifying it as a gun or firearm. The owner asked me what was inside, to which I replied that it was a muzzleloader. She practically screamed at me that shipping firearms is illegal! When I calmly explained that the federal government/ATF did not consider it a "firearm", that it wasn't loaded, contained no gun powder and did not/ could not fire loaded ammunition she then said she was the owner and could refuse to accept anything she didn't like. Unfortunately she was correct, she did in fact have that option. The local post office had no such policy after answering all their questions concerning hazardous or prohibited materials happily accepted the package. Most recently I purchased a flintlock trade gun which FedEx tried to de-construct from the outside in. Since it required my signature I made sure to take pictures of the damaged box as well as check the contents before signing in front of the driver. Fortunately the trade gun was not damaged but the box and foam cushioning was clearly at it's limit. One end had already been nearly ripped open in fact, see the attached photo.It's all in how the shipper packs it. There's a reason some use custom wood crates.
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