Close Menu
Gun Recs
  • Home
  • Gun Reviews
  • Gear
  • Outdoors
  • Videos
What's Hot

Will Canada Attempt a Door-to-Door Gun Confiscation?

Spin Difference: The Impact of Barrel Twist Rates on Terminal Performance

The Armed Citizen® April 24, 2026

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Gun Recs
  • Home
  • Gun Reviews
  • Gear
  • Outdoors
  • Videos
Subscribe
Gun Recs
Home»Gun Reviews»Favorite Firearms: A High-Flying Hi-Standard “A-D”
Gun Reviews

Favorite Firearms: A High-Flying Hi-Standard “A-D”

Gunner QuinnBy Gunner QuinnOctober 7, 2025
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Favorite Firearms: A High-Flying Hi-Standard “A-D”
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

All of this story can’t be validated, but it makes for a good tale and adds interest to this beautifully engraved custom Hi-Standard Model A handgun. The pistol was manufactured in New Haven, Conn., in late 1940. It was shipped as a Model “A,” but a heavier Model “D” barrel was installed later to replace the original, light barrel. The reasoning for this is unknown, but it does improve the pistol’s balance and handling, so I call it a Model “A-D.”

My involvement with it began at the 2012 Colorado Gun Collectors Show in Denver. A young man approached my display of “Custom Hi-Standard Pistols” with the gun in hand. There was not a lot of bluing left, but it had not been abused. In fact, it appeared to have been taken care of, although it had spent time in a holster.

The story behind it was as follows: “The pistol was carried by Joe Foss (the Marine Corps ace, South Dakota governor and NRA president) in a G.I. shoulder holster while flying missions off an aircraft carrier in the South Pacific during World War II.” Of course, that really made the gun interesting, but, without provenance, it was still just a story. Regardless, I really liked the pistol and was able to acquire it.

Now I had a really nice display piece that wasn’t presentable, and re-bluing would not have been acceptable to most collectors—unless it was engraved and then refinished. So I had Tony Lee Frost of Dayton, Ore., work on it in April of the following year in his loose Art Nouveau style similar to that of engravers of the past century. Then I met Michael Prince of Florence, Ore., at one of the Albany gun shows and was impressed with his carved ivory stocks. So, in March 2020, I had him make sets for several of my pistols. For the Model “A-D,” I had him leave the stocks with a palmswell to fit my large, long-fingered hands.

So there is the story. I have letters and receipts for what I have had done to it—you can believe what you want about “the rest of the story.”

—Jerry Watson

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleEp. 99: Fire Ants, Toad Thumper Lure Company, and New Music with Whiskey Myers
Next Article Ep. 12: John James Audubon and Vanishing America

Related Posts

Will Canada Attempt a Door-to-Door Gun Confiscation?

April 24, 2026

Spin Difference: The Impact of Barrel Twist Rates on Terminal Performance

April 24, 2026

The Armed Citizen® April 24, 2026

April 24, 2026
Latest Posts

Spin Difference: The Impact of Barrel Twist Rates on Terminal Performance

The Armed Citizen® April 24, 2026

The Search for Bob Smith

Gun of the Week: Kimber 1911 DS Warrior LW

Trending Posts

Connecticut’s New State Record Rainbow was Used to ‘Help Trigger’ Hatchery Salmon to Eat

April 24, 2026

Ep. 446: This Country Life – Reckless Abandon and Devine Intervention

April 24, 2026

The Only 8 Guns With ZERO Complaints You Need to See

April 24, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Newsletter
© 2026 Gun Recs. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.