No
If you have a genuine English "W Greener" it should be a muzzle loader, either flintlock or percussion, made between 1829 and 1869. W Greener made firearms in Birmingham, England. His son, W W Greener disagreed with his father's decision to continue making only percussion guns and started his own business in 1855. After the father's death in 1869, the son took over the business and any guns made after that year will be marked "W W Greener". WW had offices in Birmingham, London, Paris, New York, and Montreal. The family business existed until at least 1965. BUT - in the period from about 1880 to 1914, it was not considered too wrong to use a name very similar to a fine manufacturer's when making an inexpensive gun. "Parker Bros" -> "Barker" or "T Parker", "Westley Richards" -> "W Richards", and "W W Greener" -> "W Greener". Most of these knock offs were made in Belgium and will have the proofmark of "E L G *" in a crowned oval. A real Greener will have British proofs, usually crossed halberds (battle axes) with letters in each of the quadrants.
yes Milton Hershey did win a prize for making chocolate he got best chocolate of the centry
yes she was she won two nobel prizes
Yes, generically people can win prizes for their work.
Some of of my mates are making a server with SDKs guns. It's on the way I'll tell you the server when it's finished.
Making guns is not illegal. In US, anyone can make a gun that is not fully automatic for their own use without any sort of license, permit, or registration. Making guns commercially (for sale to other people) is also legal, but you have to get a license and pay a tax. Outside of US making guns is also legal in many places, provided you get an appropriate license.
The prizes were olive wreaths, palm branches and woollen ribbons
Remington Fastroy stop making these any moreFactory that is in 2008.
no haha
No, he did not.
usually fake guns, powdered guns, or guns without any bullets
yes he did