
The A.H. Fox F. Grade shotgun that accompanied Roosevelt on his 1909 to 1910 African safari, and later during his “River of Doom” Amazon River expedition, will be on display when the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library opens on July 4. American Rifleman can’t think of a better day to officially unveil the Rough Rider’s stunning gun and significant historical artifact to the public than the 250th anniversary of this great nation’s independence.
The craftsmanship and quality poured into this double-barreled shotgun is stunning, although Roosevelt requested a more workmanlike model before his Africa hunt.
“When I wrote you I did not intend to take a shotgun to Africa. I find, however, that I would like to take such a gun, provided that at close quarters I could use it with ball also. In other words I should like in case of an emergency to have it loaded with ball and use it as a spare gun for a lion. Now I have rather a pride in taking American rifles on this trip, and in the same way I should like to take an American gun; but of course you may have by this time decided that you do not care to repeat your very kind offer; in that event will you tell me what the cost of such a gun as I have described, twelve-bore and plain finish, would be?” he wrote in a letter to A.H. Fox in 1908, according to R.L. Wilson’s book “Theodore Roosevelt—Outdoorsman.”
What arrived was different. The exhibition-grade, double-barrel 12-gauge had the words “Made Expressly for Hon. Theodore Roosevelt” inscribed on the right-side barrel. French walnut stock with fleur-de-lis carving, double triggers, extractors scroll engraving, gold inlays and more made it more of a collector’s piece than dangerous-game backup or everyday shooter.
Among the few remaining company records are notes that indicate the frame, barrels and stock were personally selected by Ansley H. Fox.

“…The double-barreled shotgun has come, and I really think it is the most beautiful gun I have ever seen,” Roosevelt wrote to the company after arrival.
“I am exceedingly proud of it. I am almost ashamed to take it to Africa and expose it to the rough usage it will receive. But now that I have it, I could not possibly make up my mind to leave it behind. I am extremely proud that I am to have such a beautiful bit of American workmanship with me.”
With the shotgun’s well substantiated and continuance provenance, it was assessed at $2 million in February 2026. The museum is highlighting much more than simply its craftsmanship, artwork and value, however.
“The primary narrative we aim to share with visitors is that Roosevelt viewed these firearms not merely as weapons, but as essential tools for gathering specimens during his travels,” explained Susan Sarna, Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library senior curator of collections.
“In many ways, the shotgun functioned like a net—serving as a means for scientific collection and study. Roosevelt’s meticulous attention to detail extended to every aspect of his journey, from his clothing and hats to his glasses and, most importantly, his choice of weaponry.”
“To fully immerse visitors in Roosevelt’s adventure, the gun will be presented in a dedicated case within a room that explores his exploits in Africa,” she added. “By highlighting the shotgun in its proper context, we hope to illustrate both its historical significance and Roosevelt’s thoughtful approach to exploration and conservation.”

Roosevelt’s son Kermit inherited the shotgun. It was later owned by Kermit Roosevelt, Jr. In 1974, the family sold it to a historian. It was later purchased by a collector and now is in the museum’s collection.
“What stands out is how proud Theodore Roosevelt was to take an American-made firearm on his African expedition,” Sarna said.
“While he also brought a Holland & Holland, an English gun he admired, the Fox shotgun held particular significance for him. The library will feature this remarkable piece on display inside its original carrying box, accompanied by all its accessories—even the pajamas Roosevelt used to clean the gun.”
Opening Day & Displays
On July 4, the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library—located in Medora, N.D., roughly 3.5 hours from Mount Rushmore—will officially open to the public with a special dedication.
That night, Nova Sky Stories will put on “Eyes on the Stars: Theodore Roosevelt and the American West” drone show. Officials are adding to the day’s schedule, and readers are encouraged stay up to date by visiting the library’s Grand Opening webpage.
Much of the displays will be seen by the public for the first time in history. They include items he always kept on his desk at Sagamore Hill, including an inkwell used by Abraham Lincoln, candlestick from the signing of the Treaty of Portsmouth, a photograph of his wife and more.
Visitors will also get a glimpse into a challenging chapter of his life.
“Among these treasures is Theodore Roosevelt’s deeply personal diary from the time when both his wife and mother passed away, featuring the poignant entry marked with an ‘X’ and the words, ‘the light has gone out of my life,’” Sarna said.
“In addition, visitors can view a portrait of Abraham Lincoln that Roosevelt kept in his White House office—a piece he often turned to for inspiration, reportedly asking himself, ‘What would Lincoln do?’ whenever confronted with difficult decisions.”
There’s also full-scale recreation of Roosevelt’s Elkhorn Ranch. “It’s the closest you can get to the Badlands that shaped him,” according to Sarna, “with immersive sights and stories that show how a hunter became one of America’s greatest conservation leaders—and how he learned to balance progress with protecting wild places.”
The grand opening is an amazing way to celebrate this great nation’s 250th anniversary.
Enjoy

Smallbore competitors with a sense of history are among those who recognize Mossberg’s participation in and contribution to the game in the 20th century. Though today long out of that market, many of Mossberg’s landmark precision rimfire rifles are still around, including the war-born Model 144.
First appearing in O.F. Mossberg & Sons, Inc., 1950 catalog, the Model 144 .22 rimfire target rifle was the offspring of its World War II veteran progenitor, the Model 44US used by American military recruits for marksmanship training. Mossberg designed the Model 44US for the War Department, which was in need of a dedicated training rifle for the 16 million Americans who ultimately served in WWII. Most who served learned to shoot, and many learned or demonstrated marksmanship in basic training with a Mossberg.
Mossberg delivered nearly 58,000 Model 44US rifles to the armed forces in 1943–44. Post-war, Mossberg’s surprisingly accurate Model 44US became a popular target rifle, and the company sold so many wars-end cancelled-contract rifles, designated Model 44US(a), that it went on to sell Model 44US(b), (c) and (d) versions, each with minor modifications. Part of the popularity was due to Mossberg offering its target rifles at prices below those of Winchester and Remington, when NRA Smallbore competitors in the 1950s probably well outnumbered other rifle disciplines. But the Model 44US was ostensibly a training rifle, not a Smallbore rifle, so it was a logical next step, then, for Mossberg to bring out what is essentially an improved Model 44US better suited and intended by design for competition, the Model 144.
Made for the game
Competition features of the Model 144 include a 26-inch, heavy, “semi-free floating” barrel of 13/16-inch diameter, adjustable trigger, target stock with cheek rest, beavertail fore-end and adjustable hand stop, along with Mossberg’s S130 ½-minute click adjustable rear aperture sight and S106 front ramp sight. In 1954, Mossberg upgraded the rifle with Lyman’s 17A front sight and a Lyman competition rear sight made specifically for Mossberg, the 57MS, and labelled the new gun the Model 144LS (for Lyman Sights). By 1960, the Model 144LS was also sporting white line spacers and Mossberg’s “AC-KRO-GRUV” rifled barrels.
Later model designations indicate more changes. The 144LSA of 1960 dropped the steel 57MS rear sight, replaced by Mossberg’s S331 alloy sight. The Model 144LSB of the mid-1970s added an inch of bigger barrel for a 27-inch, 15/16-inch diameter tube and stretched the stock an inch, adding about a half-pound of weight. Mossberg quit the .22 precision rifle business in 1985 (the company makes plinker and hunter models today), ending the Model 144 series.
Unusual details
Unsurprisingly perhaps, the U.S. military was among Mossberg’s customers for the Model 144, and so we see today some of these rifles marked, “Model 144US.” The specific rifle here has “Model 144US” stamped on the barrel below “O.F. MOSSBERG & SONS INC. NORTH HAVEN, CONN. U.S.A.” followed by “22 LONG RIFLE ONLY.” A second “U.S.” stamp appears in front of the serial number on the receiver portion. Mossberg did not habitually serial number its firearms until the Gun Control Act of 1968 required the practice, so except for government contract rifles bearing the “U.S.” stamp, Model 144s may lack serial numbers.
Examining a Model 144US in your hands, the heavy barrel and receiver appear at first to be turned from a single bar of steel; both are of the same diameter, and fit is so tight and clean that you must look to find the joint.
What is Mossberg’s “semi-free floating” barrel? Two screws hold the barrel and action to the stock, the receiver screw and a second screw on the fore-end that passes through the sling swivel and threads into a stamped steel barrel band to pull the band into the stock. The barrel channel is inlet to accept the band.
Apparently, Mossberg intended the barrel to free float its entire length, except at the barrel band, which acts rather like a pillar (hence, “semi-free floating” barrel). But on this specimen, I could not slide a piece of paper between barrel and stock at any point, indicating the barrel is not free floating at all. Given the rifle’s provenance, the barrel and stock are possibly not original mates from the factory and so do not fit precisely.
The rifle is among several acquired from a college gunsmithing program by my local gun shop, along with a baker’s dozen of Mossberg Model 44US rifles. Previous ownership includes the Arizona Game & Fish Department, as borne out by metal ID tags and stocks etched with Department numbers.
All rifles were in various states of disrepair, suffering buggered screw slots, dinged or cracked stocks and missing parts. In addition to the barrel not “semi-free floating,” this particular Model 144US was missing the rear sight and magazine.
Havlin Sales, which specializes in obsolete Mossberg firearms, came through with a reproduction 10-round magazine and an OM 22 Peep sight, a new production sight that replaces the various Mossberg rear sights original to the Models 44US and 144. Intermittent misfiring plagued the rifle as well, which was rectified by replacing the mainspring and the slightly bent mainspring plunger.
Trigger adjustment is a simple spring-plunger-screw configuration at the front of the trigger. Turned all the way in, the trigger won’t move. Backing it out from that point, each full turn of the adjustment screw reduces trigger pull weight roughly one pound, from nine pounds down to a measured minimum of 3½ pounds. The trigger has no take-up and breaks cleanly without perceptible overtravel. Especially given its simplicity, it’s surprising to find such a good trigger on a bargain-price target rifle.
There is no evidence of the firing pin striking the chamber face, so the Model 144US apparently can be dry fired without damage, as befitting a competition rifle. Headspace on the rifle checked good, and pulling bullets and dumping powder from a few .22 LR cases to test-fire, with only the priming demonstrated all parts in the fire control group were doing their jobs.
Mossberg called its barrel pillar arrangement a “semi-free floated” barrel.
But is it competitive?
Using inexpensive plinking ammunition to get some semblance of a zero also fouled the bore for subsequent shots to “settle in,” before shooting for groups with pricier, match-grade ammo. Fired from a heavy rest, the Mossberg is capable of routine ½-inch groups at 25 yards with a variety of match-grade loads. I attribute some dispersion and flyers to my own eyesight and the ceaseless wind in my locale.
While groups recorded here (which include the flyers) don’t keep up with today’s uber-.22s like those from Anschutz or Vudoo Gun Works, they are competitive by 1950s NRA Smallbore competition standards. A younger eye and more exhaustive testing would likely coax better performance from the Model 144US.
Prices and parts
“A new .22 long rifle match rifle by Mossberg has been giving excellent groups at 50 and 100 yards, comparing favorably with fine high-priced match rifles,” Elmer Keith reported on the Model 144 in American Rifleman magazine’s March 1950 Dope Bag section. “Yet the new Mossberg rifle sells for only $28.” Keith recorded the Model 144 printing 1½-inch groups at 100 yards and ¾-inch ones at 50 yards. “It will do very fine work for such a low-priced rifle,” he said.
By 1955, Gun Digest listed the upgraded Model 144LS for $39.95. The same Gun Digest listed the comparable Winchester Model 75 Target Rifle with sights for $62.40, the Winchester Model 52 Heavy Barrel without sights for $106.90, and Remington’s Model 513T for $62.45 and Model 37 for $144.10, both with sights. Examining the workings of the Model 144, we find that Mossberg apparently undersold its major competitors not by inferior workmanship, but by clever engineering to minimize complexity and the number of parts. For example, the Model 144’s entire fire control group—bolt assembly, adjustable trigger mechanism, safety and ejector—contains only three springs and two screws. There is perhaps also some cost savings in the alloy trigger bracket and trigger.
Model 144 rifles are still in demand today—as shooters, not just as collectors. A quick internet perusal for this article showed four rifles sold in 2021 from $330 to $748, making an average of $502. If you stumble across or decide to seek out a Model 144 to call your own, expect that not all parts may be functioning, correct or original—or even present.
Some original or reproduction parts are readily available, and some are not. Three major resources for M144 parts are the previously mentioned Havlin Sales, Jack First Gun Parts and Numrich Gun Parts Corporation. Shooters possessing even a modicum of mechanical aptitude will have little trouble understanding the fit and functioning of the rifles’ simple innards, but the NRA Guide to Firearm Assembly has an “exploded view” schematic of the Model 144LS, if needed.
Wartime exigencies typically prompt finding shortcuts in manufacturing, including utilizing materials or designs that are “good enough” rather than top-of-the-line in order to reduce cost and complexity. Mossberg’s Model 44US is typical in that regard, and yet it unexpectedly earned such a reputation for accuracy that “good enough” successfully carried over into the popular Model 144, a full-on match gun still appreciated and still appearing at local shooting ranges three generations later.
AC-KRO-GRUV Rifling
Soon after Marlin introduced its “Micro-groove” rifling in the 1950s, Mossberg’s own testing led to the company developing its “AC-KRO-GRUV” rifling. The two are similar in swaging many, shallower rifling grooves than found in typical barrels up until that time.
Both companies claimed improved accuracy and both introduced proprietary shallow-groove button rifling in .22 rimfire rifles, Mossberg beginning with the 300 series of hammerless .22s in 1957. While Marlin’s .22 LR Micro-groove barrels sported 16 grooves, Mossberg decided eight grooves were optimum for the .22 LR bullet. Both companies retained the 1:16-inch twist standard for .22 LR bores.
Marlin patented its Micro-groove rifling method first, in 1953, and went on to apply it to center-fire rifles, such as the Model 336 .30-30 lever-action rifles.
A world of hurt is on its way!
Ruger Max-9
Gunnery Sergeant Morris “Bud” Fisher, USMC (1890–1968), was a premier American rifle shooter who won five Olympic gold medals in the 1920s.
A standout marksman for the Marine Corps, he secured gold in both the 1920 Antwerp and 1924 Paris Games, won six world titles, set five world records, and later served as a shooting instructor during World War II. He passed away in 1968 in Honolulu, Hawaii.





