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A Work of History and Remembrance

Every rifle worth owning is bought twice.

Once by the man who carries it — and once, in his mind, by the boy he means to give it to. This is the story of that covenant: the deer camps that built three generations of American men, the year a storied rifle-maker broke faith with its own customers, and the quiet, blameless disappearance of a tradition that ran for a century without ever writing down its own rules.

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A Rifle for My Son — The Vanishing World of the American Hunter, book cover
Drawn from federal hunting-participation data, published firearms histories & firsthand accounts from New Haven and the deer camps
What's Inside

Eleven chapters. Four parts. One vanishing world.

The full story of the rifle handed down, the factory that stopped making it, and the deer camps that are running out of men.

01
The First Rifle
The gun counter, the boy at eleven, and the week's wages a family paid to hand across a piece of trust.
Part One
02
The Blood on the Face
The thousand-year-old rite of the blooding, and what it was actually built to teach a boy.
Part One
03
The Shack
Inside the deer camp that ran for a century, holding the dead in the company of the living.
Part One
04
The Gun on the Wall
Why the rifle, and not the watch or the truck, became the object worth handing down.
Part Two
05
How They Were Made
Machined steel, hand-cut checkering, and the New Haven craft no factory teaches anymore.
Part Two
06
The Year They Cheapened It
1964 — the year a storied maker broke faith with the men who trusted it, and never repaired it.
Part Two
07
The Men Who Made Them
Twenty thousand New Haven workers, and the April morning in 2006 the line went quiet for good.
Part Two
08
The Empty Stands
The federal data behind the decline — and why the raw hunter count hides the real story.
Part Three
09
Why the Boy Didn't Come
The cities, the closed land, and the quiet, blameless reasons the tradition lost its ground.
Part Three
10
The Last Man at Camp
The Sunday night thousands of men have lived, each believing himself alone in it.
Part Three
11
A Rifle for My Son
The rifle comes off the wall one last time, and the question the whole book has been asking.
Part Four

The rifle on your wall is still waiting for an answer.

In 1982, 16.7 million Americans hunted. By 2022 that share had fallen under 5% of the population, and the men still going are older every year.

This 78-page book documents the tradition before it's gone — the deer camps, the year a storied rifle-maker broke faith with its own customers, and a practical guide to making sure the rifle in your family doesn't stop with you.

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A Rifle for My Son

78 pages. Eleven chapters. Four appendices. Delivered as an instant-download PDF.

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  • The full story of the American hunting tradition, from the gun counter to the empty deer camp
  • The 1964 story — why "pre-64" rifles still command a premium six decades later
  • A field guide to the vanished hunting rites — the blooding, the buck pole, the last bite
  • Appendix IV — a practical guide to passing down a rifle: the history, the story, and the legal transfer
  • Instant PDF delivery — read on any device
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Reader Notes

From the field.

— Illustrative reader reactions based on the book's themes —

★★★★★

"I read the chapter on the blooding out loud to my son the night before his first hunt. Neither of us made it through dry-eyed."

— R. Halloway, Michigan
★★★★★

"I've told the story of my grandfather's Model 70 a hundred times, but I never understood why 1964 mattered until this book explained it. Now I know exactly what I'm holding."

— J. Ostrander, Vermont
★★★★★

"The chapter on the New Haven factory closing hit harder than I expected. My uncle worked that line for thirty years."

— C. Marsh, Idaho
★★★★★

"Appendix IV alone was worth the price. I finally sat down and wrote out the history of my father's rifle before I forget the details myself."

— D. Reinholt, Wisconsin
★★★★★

"Our camp went from fifteen men to four over twenty years. Reading 'The Last Man at Camp' felt like reading my own Sunday nights."

— T. Callahan, Pennsylvania
★★★★★

"This isn't really a gun book. It's a book about fathers and sons that happens to be about rifles. I bought copies for both of mine."

— B. Hutchins, Wyoming
Common Questions

Before you order.

No. This is a work of history and remembrance. It does cover a bit about marksmanship, hunting technique, or firearm operation. It's about the tradition, the rituals, and the rifle that carried them forward — and what happens now that the tradition is thinning.
No. Many readers have never hunted a day in their life. This is a book about fathers, sons, inheritance, and the quiet disappearance of a world — the hunting is the lens, not the subject.
A downloadable PDF delivered instantly after purchase. Read it on a phone, tablet, or computer, or print it to keep on the shelf near the safe. No app or subscription required.
The book draws on federal hunting-participation data, published firearms histories, and firsthand accounts from former Winchester workers and hunters, all detailed in "A Note on Sources." Where memory and record disagree, the book says so.
7-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. If the book isn't useful to you, request a refund within a week of purchase.
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