1885 Safari single shot rifle

Forrest Halley

AH legend
Joined
Jul 28, 2019
Messages
2,266
Reaction score
4,628
Location
VA, USA
Media
29
In another thread I came across a gentleman who had an 1885 High Wall in .35 Whelan. This got me thinking about one in .375 H&H. Winchester apparently made one in very limited numbers. A search of the interwebs comes up sparse with everything sold and none for sale. Does anyone know anything more about them?
 
In another thread I came across a gentleman who had an 1885 High Wall in .35 Whelan. This got me thinking about one in .375 H&H. Winchester apparently made one in very limited numbers. A search of the interwebs comes up sparse with everything sold and none for sale. Does anyone know anything more about them?
I'm really not the one who should ask this, but I will, why would you be interested in one? Kind of interesting though?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Last edited by a moderator:
1. I said I was curious about this rifle in .375 H&H.
2. I do not meet the requirements for ownership of the B&M series.
Yep..... Even curious about 375 puts you in a really poor light...................
3. They should've all been 16" barrels.
Single shots are amazing pieces of machinery. Actions are short of course. A 20 inch 1885 is the same as a 16-17 inch bolt gun, WSM gun. 24 inch 1885 is the same length as a 20 inch WSM gun.....
 
Yep..... Even curious about 375 puts you in a really poor light...................

Single shots are amazing pieces of machinery. Actions are short of course. A 20 inch 1885 is the same as a 16-17 inch bolt gun, WSM gun. 24 inch 1885 is the same length as a 20 inch WSM gun.....
Yep I'm poorly lit alright. I have only a .458 Lott in my clinging to manhood. Three .375's which make the slope slippery indeed.
I'm saying that the 16" single shot is the shortest one can possibly go in the US without getting into tax stamps. If the B&M is so great out of a short barrel...why not make it as short as possible?
 
If the B&M is so great out of a short barrel...why not make it as short as possible?
Well, there is no "IF" to that concern. The reason I went with 20-24 inches with the 1885s is MOSTLY Aesthetic value. I despise the long stock mannlicher look. In the case of 458 and 416 1885s I also wanted to look at the barrel length to see what the gains were in comparison to 18-20 inch barrels. 50 B&M there is no gains at 20 inches over 18 inches, I have plenty of data on that. But as the bore gets smaller, you start to loose inside cubic inches to burn that powder, so 458 and 416 is not as efficient as .500 caliber, easy logic, and backed up with data. Simply less inside cubic inches. I would not desire longer than 24 inches with 1885 or Ruger #1. In fact, 20 inches most of the time is pretty good, but the forearms of the 1885s are longer than the Ruger #1, so 22-24 looks about right. I don't want a piece of stock right up to the muzzle, that is not appealing to me.
 
After careful measurements on this 1885 I requested a 21 inch barrel, since the forearm on this gun was rather long. This gun was built at the same time as the Ruger #1 in 50 B&M Alaskan, the shorter forearm of the Ruger allowed me to go with a 20 inch barrel to look proportional.

DSCN2559-X4.jpg
DSCN2570-X3.jpg
DSCN2572-X3.jpg
DSCN2575-X3.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
B4951BBD-F520-4D7B-97B4-C74D4B26DC48.jpeg


Ballard Arms made a few safari style 1885s when they were in business. I believe this one was a .450-400. I was going to order one like this before they went under. Lately I have been thinking of having a 9.3x74 built on a C. Sharps Arms or Montana Vintage Arms 1885 action, but it would likely be along these lines. Long story short, I can understand where you are coming from with the .375.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
28" barrel, auto cocking, left or right eject... interesting indeed.
@Forrest Halley
You forgot mate and down right class plus the same length or shorter than a bolt gun even with a 28 inch barrel.
You could always get a hiwall and barrel it to 375.
Bob
 
Yep..... Even curious about 375 puts you in a really poor light...................

Single shots are amazing pieces of machinery. Actions are short of course. A 20 inch 1885 is the same as a 16-17 inch bolt gun, WSM gun. 24 inch 1885 is the same length as a 20 inch WSM gun.....
@michael458 Don't be so mean to young Forrest he can't help it if he hasn't got taste in calibers but he has nice tastes in the hiwall and a beautiful wife and son.
Just a pity I haven't educated him on the Whelen.
Bob
 
Yep I'm poorly lit alright. I have only a .458 Lott in my clinging to manhood. Three .375's which make the slope slippery indeed.
I'm saying that the 16" single shot is the shortest one can possibly go in the US without getting into tax stamps. If the B&M is so great out of a short barrel...why not make it as short as possible?
@Forrest Halley
That's when you look the best mate in poor light. You look even better in the dark with no light.
Ha ha ha ha ha
Bob
 

Forum statistics

Threads
60,502
Messages
1,318,913
Members
111,626
Latest member
RoyceSella


Latest profile posts

Behind the scenes of taking that perfect picture.....






WhatsApp Image 2025-04-23 at 09.58.07.jpeg
krokodil42 wrote on Jager Waffen74's profile.
Good Evening Evert One.
Would like to purchase 16 Ga 2.50 ammo !!
Rattler1 wrote on trperk1's profile.
trperk1, I bought the Kimber Caprivi 375 back in an earlier post. You attached a target with an impressive three rounds touching 100 yards. I took the 2x10 VX5 off and put a VX6 HD Gen 2 1x6x24 Duplex Firedot on the rifle. It's definitely a shooter curious what loads you used for the group. Loving this rifle so fun to shoot. Africa 2026 Mozambique. Buff and PG. Any info appreciated.
Ready for the hunt with HTK Safaris
Treemantwo wrote on Jager Waffen74's profile.
Hello:
I’ll take the .375 Whitworth for $1,150 if the deal falls through.
Thanks .
Derek
[redacted]
Top