126: Indiana Jones Was Wrong: What Actually Makes a Gun Museum-Worthy | No Lowballers

Everyone likes to think their collection is special. After all, every firearm has a story, a memory or a family connection attached to it. But when does a gun actually rise to the level of being museum-worthy?

In this episode of the No Lowballers Podcast, Logan Metesh of High Caliber History and Allen Forkner of GunBroker dig into a question that collectors, historians and gun owners have debated for years: what truly belongs in a museum?

Inspired by a famous line from Indiana Jones — “It belongs in a museum!” — the conversation explores the reality behind what museums want, what they collect and why most guns (even old ones) rarely make the cut.

The discussion breaks down the difference between rarity and historical importance, why provenance matters more than people realize and how museums really operate behind the scenes. Logan also shares insights from his time working at the National Firearms Museum and what it was like fielding constant donation offers from collectors convinced their guns deserved a display case.

Along the way, the guys explain why most “collectible” firearms aren’t collectible, why museums only display a tiny percentage of their holdings and why the stories behind guns often matter more than the guns themselves.

The episode also dives into common misconceptions about museum collections, including why donating a gun doesn’t guarantee it will ever go on display and how collectors can help preserve history the right way.

Most importantly, Logan and Allen remind listeners that the real purpose of collecting isn’t impressing museums — it’s preserving stories, family history and the enjoyment of the hobby itself.

Because sometimes the most important museum… is the one in your own home.


In This Episode

• The difference between rarity and historical significance in firearms collecting
• Why a single gun can be historic while the model itself isn’t
• How museums actually decide what to acquire
• Why museums only display a small fraction of their collections
• The role of provenance and documentation in historical firearms
• Why many “limited edition” or commemorative guns never gain real collector value
• How collectors can help preserve history through documentation and storytelling
• Why family heirlooms often matter more than museum pieces


Key Takeaway

Just because something is old — or even rare — doesn’t mean it belongs in a museum. Historical significance usually comes from the story behind a specific firearm, not simply the model itself. As Logan puts it, nobody will ever love your collection the way you do, and that’s exactly how it should be.

Join the Conversation

What firearms in your collection would never leave your family museum?

Do you own anything that you think truly belongs in a public museum?

Let us know in the comments.

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If you appreciate thoughtful conversations about firearms history, hunting culture and the stories behind iconic guns, be sure to subscribe to the No Lowballers Podcast. New episodes feature collectors, historians, writers and industry insiders who care about more than just specs and trends.

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Follow No Lowballers on ⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠ and ⁠⁠Facebook⁠⁠ for behind-the-scenes content, historical deep dives and weekly drops every Thursday. Find Logan at ⁠⁠High Caliber History⁠⁠ and Allen at ⁠⁠GunBroker⁠⁠.

About the Author

  • Hear the truth behind the trigger on this show that highlights the insanity, calamity and oddity of firearm history, collectibles and the crazy valuables. Every week historian Logan Metesh of High Caliber History joins Allen Forkner of GunBroker.com to discuss topics such as mobster favorites, collector pieces, war-time weapons, hunting gun history, competition firearms and more.

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