If you would like a list of all the Winchester commemorative guns made, contact the Winchester Museums. They are located in San Jose, California.
Both Winchester and Marlin made "trade name" guns for others. National Fire Arms appears under both names in my references, including one very much like the Winchester 1897.
There are several versions that were made over the years, all of them are out of production right now. But Daisy keeps bringing it back as a commemorative every now and then. The last time was in 1996 I believe. I own 2 of the older ones and Yes they are neat. You could try the web, places like "Guns America" or "Gun Trader" get them occasionally
Yes
All Winchester Commemoratives will have numerous indicators on either the stock, barrel, or receiver, or all of those places. The Lone Star Commemorative is stamped as such, in gold lettering, on the barrel, and has a medal emblem insert in the stock. Any commemorative will leave zero doubt as if it is one. The Lone Star is one of 6 that come in the carbine model (short barrel), and also the long 26" octagonal barrel. A good resource to check on these is the auction site www.gunbroker.com. Look thru the commemorative section on Winchester Commemoratives, and most of the auctions have photos so you can see exactly what they look like, as well as giving you a good idea of what they sell for.
Commemorative is five syllables divided like this: com-mem-o-ra-tive.
A commemorative coin is made in honor of something, like a historical event or a famous person.
None
WOULD LIKE TO KNOW THE VALUE OF A 1976 WINCHESTER 30/30, MODEL # 94
Guns are property just like any other and there is no particular reason why they would be immune from seizure.
Can you post a photo someplace? I've never heard of a Winchester model that didn't have the Winchester name, the chambering and the model number stamped on it, even the lowest end guns that didn't get serial numbers still had markings. I seriously doubt it's a Winchester.
It would be very busy and a lot of people would be using guns.
NO. Daisy is it's own company. Crosman is it's own company. Crosman owns the Benjamin and the Sheridan line of air guns. Daisy markets Winchester and Avanti air guns along with the Daisy line of air guns. These are not the only air gun companies. There are many more like Gamo, Beeman, Umarex, Hatsan and more who are independent companies.