I am just about certain the work was done by Harvey Rodgers. If it was not him, then they stole his checkering tools to do it. The shape of the diamonds, the style of pattern, and the style of border are all exactly like the other Rodgers guns I have seen. Other indicators to me are, the shape of the pistol grip, the slight suggestion of the flutes on the comb are as Rodgers did in his later work, and the way he transitioned to the beavertail forend. I tried to capture these elements as best I could with my limited picture taking ability.
This is an early 30's rifle with standard barrel and stock, it was not a marksman style stock. The great part is that I got it for about 80% of what you would expect to pay for an original 52 of the same vintage and in the same condition. To a Winchester collector this is just another ruined 52 with no collector value. To us early custom rifle enthusiasts, it is a treasure. Thankfully, there is way fewer of us than there are Winchester collectors. Like Michael always say, there are still a lot of treasures waiting to be found, particularly from those makers who did not regularly mark there work.
It may be because Arthur Hart was a competitive shooter, but it seems to me that a lot of Rodgers stocks are on target rifles. Of the 4 Rodgers stocks I have, 3 are target guns. Micheal, do you know if Rodgers was a competitive shooter?
Thanks,
John