Reading the OP by ironwood, got me to thinking back to the 1954-1965 era when I was a boy growing up in Eastern Kentucky and Southwest Virginia. Back then, and up until about the mid 1970's, hunting was small game and the king of small game hunting was squirrel hunting, and squirrel hunting was not a sport, squirrel hunting was a ritual. The hunt began with a religious observance and ended with a religious observance. Boys got an excused absence from school if they had a note saying they were squirrel hunting with their father or mentor. You could not start squirrel hunting until the Monday before Thanksgiving, and then only if there had been seven consecutive frosts and seven consecutive freezes. Squirrel hunting was over the last day of December. Absolutely no hunting of any kind, on a Sunday.
During the same time period, rabbit, very plentiful, and grouse, also very plentiful, were also popular tablefare. Families, extended families, and neighbors would come together for hunts and enjoy meals together of squirrel, rabbit, and grouse to celebrate the hunts.
The week of Thanksgiving was the most popular time and plans would be made a year in advance to be sure the family could be together for the hunt on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. Thursday we butchered hogs. Friday we made, lard, cracklins for our bread, and sausage. Saturday, the young boys, 9 years old, were taken out by fathers, uncles, grandfathers, or mentors for their first hunt. For me, turning 9 was much more special and much more memorable than turning 18 or 21!
The most popular hunting rifle in those days was the bolt action, single shot, manual cocking, 22 rimfie. This was for squirrels and accounted for about 80% of the squirrel hunters. There were two shotguns, the 16 gauge and the 410.
The most popular 16 ga was a Stevens, bolt action, tube feed. you could hunt rabbit, grouse, and goose with one shotgun.
The most popular 410 would be a close call between the Winchester 37 and the H&R Topper.
A box of Perers 22 short, the squirrel round, was 25 cents or one dozen brown eggs. A box of Peters 410 shotshells was, I think I remember correctly, $1.95, or 8 dozen brown eggs.
My first 22 rimfire was a Stevens 15, $12.95. My first shotgun that was my very own, not one of the familie's, was a H&R Topper 410. I am thinking it was close to $30.00. It was paid for with my own money, working for 35 cents an hour as a 12 year old boy. In my gun safe today is a model 15, 22 single shot and a H&R Topper 410. When I hit post here, I think I will go get them and clean them again.
I guess I could wrie a book on why things are so different today, but, I personally, think it is all about family.