Bullet and Shell Civil War Projectiles Forum
Relic Discussion => Remembering The Great Ones => Topic started by: Daveslem on January 05, 2016, 08:20:00 PM
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Just heard that Dan Poppen passed away. He was 84. Always looked forward to seeing him walking around at the Gettysburg shows with his briefcase full of bullets. He always had great bullets for sale and a good joke to tell. Recently I had been asking about him as I hadn't seen him in a number of years. RIP, Dan.
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Thanks for the notification, Dave.
Carl or Mike, please move this thread to the "Remembering The Great Ones" section, if you agree that Dan merits it.
Regards,
Pete
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Did not know him but do recognize the name as a member of our community. My condolences to his family and friends.
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I only met Dan a couple times and never got to see his entire bullet collection. I recall when his shell collection was sold off, and I landed some nice pieces. One (a common Hotchkiss shell) was so important to him he decided he wanted it back and so I of course obliged. Dan was definitely a legend for among other things his significant bullet collection and cannot be replaced.
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I would guess that everyone knew that Dan was the head radiographer at NWS Dahlgren, VA. That is where I met him in the early 60s and he supplied the Cochran shell for my book.
Kind Regards,
John
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I only met Dan a couple times and never got to see his entire bullet collection. I recall when his shell collection was sold off, and I landed some nice pieces. One (a common Hotchkiss shell) was so important to him he decided he wanted it back and so I of course obliged. Dan was definitely a legend for among other things his significant bullet collection and cannot be replaced.
Mike--did he tell you what made that particular shell special? Was it an especially nice one?
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It was a nice one, but what I recall made it special was that he had found it himself