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Allyn Tedmon originated the tell-it-as-I-see-it, “straight talk express” the first time he put pen to paper; he never mastered the fine art of equivocation. For this reason, his charismatic voice would probably prove unpublishable today, or not, at any rate, without editing so severe as to oppress his distinctive spirit. Fortunately for anyone who cares to sample that spirit, much of his work appeared in Arms and the Man and The American Rifleman, which – because they tended to be preserved by NRA members – remain the most widely available today of pre-WWII sporting periodicals.
PARTIAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ALLYN H. TEDMON
1902 “Recommend No. 44 Stevens,” Recreation, July. 1914 “Differs from ‘Antipop,’” Outdoor Life, Jan. 1915 “That New Rifle,” Outdoor Life (reprinted in Gun Writers of Yesteryear by Jim Foral). “Horse Play Out West,” Outing, Dec. 1916 “Rifle Notes,” Outdoor Life, Feb. 1917 “On the Trail of the .250-3000,” Outers’ Book, Nov. 1919 “Random Hunting Re flections,” Outdoor Life, March. “Rifle Notes,” Outdoor Life, April. 1920 “The .250-3000 Savage on Big Game,” Arms and the Man, June 1. “Looking Backward,” Outdoor Life, July. “Start the Boy Out Right,” Outdoor Life, July. “What You and I Can Do with an Inexpensive Arm,” Outdoor Life, Aug. “Rifles What Was,” Arms and the Man, Dec. 1 1921 “Small Deer,” Arms and the Man, Oct.1. 1922 “Lest We Forget,” Arms and the Man, Feb.15. “Hunting the Little Bears of the West,” Arms and the Man, May 15. “The Fable of a Rifle Nut,” Arms and the Man, June 1. “There Were Others,” Arms and the Man, June 15. “Coyotes,” Arms and the Man, July 1. “The Days of Real Sport,” Arms and the Man, Aug. 1. “The High Power,” Arms and the Man, Sept. 15. “Milkin’ Her Dry,” Arms and the Man, Nov. 1. 1923 “What Would Pat Garrett Have Done?,” Arms and the Man, Jan.1. “Canis Latrans,” Arms and the Man, Jan.15. “Ramblings of a Nut,” Arms and the Man, April 1. “If You Can’t Buy It, Make It!,” Arms and the Man, May 15. “A Law for the Outlaw,” The American Rifleman, June1. “Beyond the Dollar Sign,” The American Rifleman, Sept.1. “The .250-3000 on Lion and Bear,” The American Rifleman, Sept.15. “Truth is Mighty and Shall Prevail,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1924 “Popping Prairie Poodles with Chauncy Thomas,” Outdoor Life, Feb. “The Single Shot Rifle, Outdoor Life, Feb. “Not for Pistol ‘Antis,’” The American Rifleman, Sept.15. 1925 “It Reminded Me,” The American Rifleman, March 1. “Them Awful Boys,” Outdoor Life, Dec. “Those Stevens Rifles,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1927 “Not an Hour Off, But an Off Hour,” The American Rifleman, April “The Scope Sight You Can Afford,” The American Rifleman, July. “Boys and Rifles,” The American Rifleman, Nov. 1928 “Where Peterson Barrels Were Born,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “A Man at Stake,” Ace-High Magazine, August 1. 1929 “A Red Letter Day,” The American Rifleman, March. 1930 “The Stevens Ideal 44 1/2 Action,” The American Rifleman, July. “Riders of the Crescent,” Ace-High Magazine, July 15. 1931 “Two Favorites,” The American Rifleman, Feb. “Small Deer Rifles,” The American Rifleman, March. “Sighting Small Deer Rifles,” The American Rifleman, August. “Rim Fires and Game,” The American Rifleman, Nov. 1932 “On Safety in Shooting and Other Matters,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “The Front Sight on Small Game,” The American Rifleman, Nov. 1923 “Butt-Plates to Order,” Field and Stream, Feb. “.25-20 Super Speed,” The American Rifleman, Nov. “Thoroughfare Bear,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1935 “Rifles and Guns for Little Boys,” Outdoor Life, Oct. “A Good Rifle Rest,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1936 “Mortgaged Marmots,” Outdoor Life, June. “Mountain Marmot Stalking in Colorado,” Sports Afield, July. “Specter Buck,” Outdoor Life, Sept. 1937 “C. W. Rowland Has Left the Range,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “The .25 Stevens Rim Fire,” The American Rifleman, March. “Hunting Marmots in the Rain,” The American Rifleman, June. “The .25-20 and Its Grandchildren,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1938 “Stevens 44 ½‘s Still Favorites,” Outdoor Life, Jan. “Try Jackrabbit Shooting,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1939 “There is a Limit,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “C. E. Howard-Rifleman,” The American Rifleman, Feb. “When You Can’t Lie Down,” The American Rifleman, June. “Johnny Chuck-Game or Varmint?,” National Sportsman, Aug. “Duplicate Bucks,” The American Rifleman, Oct. 1940 “The Savage Model 1899,” The American Rifleman, Feb. “Why Not a Savage .35?,” The American Rifleman, March. 1941 “Chauncy Thomas,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1943 “Give Uncle Sam a Boy Who Can Shoot,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “Short Range Backlog,” The American Rifleman, July. “An Old Timer’s Story of .22 Caliber Hunting,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1944 “That Man Peterson,” The American Rifleman, Jan. “Mystery Lead,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1945 “Offhand, I’d Say,” The American Rifleman, March. “Air Guns for Aerial Targets,” The American Rifleman, Oct. “Postwar Shooting,” The American Rifleman, Nov. “The Offhand Rifle,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1946 “That Modern Single Rifle,” The American Rifleman, J “Precocious Pellets,” The American Rifleman, Dec. 1948 “Sport with the Free Rifle,” The American Rifleman, Jan. 1949 “Tatar Cellar’s Junior Coach, The American Rifleman, Aug. 1952 “So You Want Better Offhand Scores,” The American Rifleman, July. “The American Free Rifle,” The New Official Gun Book, Charles R. Jacobs, Ed. 1953 “The Blake .400.” The American Rifleman, Jan. “The Stevens Model 44 Action,” The Single Shot Rifle News, April. 1956 “He Splits Cards at 100 Yards,” Guns Magazine, March. “Single-Shots of Yesterday,” Gun Report, Sept. 1957 “Stevens Tip-Up Rifles,” Gun Report, May. 1959 “The Stevens Favorite Rifle,” More Single Shot Rifles, James Grant.Custom and Engraved Guns