I wonder if you could tell me anything about a gun that I have had hanging over my fireplace for more than 40 years. It is by Bayfield and Needham and has the words "From Westley Richards" on the barrel.
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out more.I enclose some photographs (below)
BILL HARRIMAN
Bayfield and Needham is only listed for 1861 in the Birmingham Trade Directories, where it is described as a “gun and pistol maker”.
The words “From Westley Richards” meant that one or both of the partners had worked for that famous company and was clearly seeking to capitalise on the association.
Joseph Vernon Needham was one of the partners of this short-lived venture.
He remained at 108 New Street from 1861 to 1886.
Thereafter, he moved to the Damascus Works in Loveday Street, in the traditional Gun Quarter.
He was granted seven patents between 1872 and 1884 for dagger handles, a lever-operated magazine gun and various features of shotguns.
He is best known for his single-bite, snap-action breech-loading shotgun of 1862.
W. W. Greener took over his business in 1874.
This is a good-quality shotgun with fine scroll engraving, as well as nicely executed vignettes of gundogs and game.
The engraving of the dogs and the gamebirds is somewhat naive, and is typical of the period, which pre-dated a more realistic style.
The barrels are marked with the bore size, which was a requirement introduced by the 1855 Gun Barrel Proof Act.
Bayfield and Needham shotgun
BASC calls for delay to the Scottish government’s muirburn licensing scheme amid concerns from practitioners over the code’s workability.
Following countryside organisations’ campaigning, penalties for illegal coursing have increased, with average fines up from £360 to £6,000