If I owned that rifle I would consider myself very lucky.
Until his passing Jim was a member here. He posted very little and when he did post you should listen.
I first met him in his gun shop in the Twin Cities area. When you walked in the door the cigarette smoke would almost knock you over. If he was not a chain smoker, he seemed like he could have been. In later years he quit smoking but lung cancer I believe is what killed him.
Jim was one of the most talented craftsman I have ever known. He did love English, Scottish and Irish guns.
When I bought my first Rigby ML that has significate historical value there was only one person that I trusted to do some restoration work to it. I was lucky to only live about 3 hours straight South of him. When I took that rifle to him it was the first time that I had Jim do any work for me and I did not ask how much he was going to charge me as it did not really matter. When I got my first bill I was shocked, he was only charging me $15/hr.
After Jim closed his shop and retired, he set up a machine shop in his basement and only did jobs that he liked. It was always a fun visit to his basement shop as I was not shy to show you the projects that he was working on for other people and himself.
Just like any of his projects Jim enjoyed showing his visitors my Rigby when he had it. One year I was on my way up to Harris MN to a shoot and stopped and picked up my Rigby on the way to the match. At the match I met a guy from MN and he got to telling me about a Rigby rifle that he got to handle at Jim's shop. I smiled at him and got the rifle out of my truck.
One time he forgot I was stopping by at 7 am to drop off a rifle for repair on my way to CN fishing. I felt bad as everyone in the house was asleep and he answered the door in his underwear.
Rick Weber has a replica Alex Henry falling block rifle that is stunning that Jim worked on for several years building.
Fleener