Quote:
The A.H. Fox Skeeter was introduced in 1931 and the Sterlingworth Skeet and Upland in 1935, with automatic ejectors, Fox-Kautzky selective single trigger, beavertail forend, recoil pad, and ivory beads. Savage later offered a Sterlingworth Ejector Brush.


Huh??? From 1911 to the end of production the 26-inch barrel Sterlingworth was referred to as "Brush". When the Sterlingworth was introduced by the bogus The Sterlingworth Co. in 1910 there were two versions -- a heavy gun with 30-inch barrels called "Standard" and a lighter weight gun with 28-inch barrels called "Field". When the Sterlingworth was added to the A.H. Fox Gun Co. 1911 "Campfire" catalog the 26-inch barrel "Brush" was added to the offerings. From the A.H. Fox Gun Co. "Campfire" Catalogue No. 24 (1911) --





The 32-inch barrel Sterlingworth Trap was added by 1913 --



Any of them - Brush, Field, Standard or Trap - could be had with extractors as a Sterlingworth Brush, Sterlingworth Field, Sterlingworth Standard or Sterlingworth Trap, or with ejectors as a Sterlingworth Ejector Brush, Sterlingworth Ejector Field, Sterlingworth Ejector Standard or Sterlingworth Ejector Trap.

The straight grip and skeet choked (skeet cylinder and quarter choke) Fox-Sterlingworth Skeet & Upland Game Gun was introduced in 1935 with 26-inch barrels. It was a double trigger, plain extractor gun, but it could be ordered with most any of the regular options -- ejectors, Fox-Kautzky Single Selective Trigger, beavertail forearm, twin ivory sights and a recoil pad.



By 1937 the Fox-Sterlingworth Skeet & Upland Game Gun was also catalogued with 28-inch barrels and the twin ivory sights had become part of the package.