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Enjoying shooting's Golden Age

May 27, 2020

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Shooting Times & Country

But when exactly was it? Did the Edwardians experience our sport’s finest hour or did it occur between the wars?

- RICHARD NEGUS

Enjoying shooting's Golden Age

The wistful notion that ‘things were better back then’ is a popular, if largely foundation free, belief. Society looks fondly at the homefront of World War II, declaring it our nation’s finest hour, a time of stoic ‘Blitz’ spirit. Largely forgotten is that this same home-front saw serious crime, such as murder and rape, increase by 57%.

Shooting, too, has a rose-tinted history, the period of popular choice being the late Victorian/Edwardian era. Leaf through the browning pages of a coroneted gamebook dated 1905 and images of high society and huge bags are conjured as a time of things ‘done right’. The narrative continues with the sporting art of the period. Swan-necked ladies, bedecked in bustles and bittern-feather hats, wait like greyhounds to applaud their beau for a left-and-right. The male Guns are of the neatest order; no mud clings to their gleaming brogues or spats. Their ’taches are bold, barrels are damascus, and jackets cut like a waspish remark. They, too, are athletically slim, all bar King Edward VII, of course, who was very fat indeed, but was this really the golden time for lowland game shooting?

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