1860 ARMY EXPERIMENTAL OR PROTOTYPE CARTRIDGE CONVERSION REVOLVER

Started by Henry4440, September 12, 2007, 12:58:51 PM

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Henry4440

SN 114721. Cal. 44 RF. 1860 Army configuration with 8" rnd bbl, German silver front sight with the very rare engraved in script "Sam. Colt" in place of bbl address. It has 3-screw frame cut for shoulder stock with no notch in buttstrap. Frame, hammer, trigger guard & backstrap are engraved in late vine style, with full frame coverage foliate arabesque patterns with matching patterns on sides of hammer & remnants of wolf's heads on each side of hammer nose. Backstrap, trigger guard & sides of bbl lug are engraved to match. It has an altered front frame having had rebated step removed to a nearly straight line and hammer nose notch altered for the rimfire firing pin. Frame around the percussion hammer nose has had a plug welded in place and the rimfire notch cut. It has a rare straight cylinder with bored through chambers, slightly rebated for cartridge rims and no conversion ring on recoil face. The right recoil shield has been cut away as a loading notch. It still retains its orig percussion rammer. It has a silver plated brass trigger guard and iron backstrap with a wonderful smooth 1-pc ivory grip. The top of backstrap has a "D" inspector mark with no serial number on buttstrap indicating that it was probably a recycled, rejected military part. This is an example of one of the earliest Colt attempts at a large bore cartridge revolver. The Book of Colt Firearms, Sutherland & Wilson, on p. 212 describes another of these revolvers as "experimental 44 rimfire revolver on the Model 1860 Army frame". That revolver had mixed serial numbers. The paragraph dates that revolver, and consequently this revolver, at circa 1868-69. Accompanied by a 2-page Larry Wilson letter detailing some of above information wherein he also states that the engraved bbl address of "Sam. Colt" is "known on scarce few Model 1860 Army Colt revolvers of the post-Civil War period". This exact revolver is pictured on p. 266 of The Colt Engraving Book, Wilson, and was offered as Lot 149-17927 in the Summer 2001 David Condon retail catalog. In the evolution of cartridge revolvers, this one must rate near the very top. It undoubtedly is the progenitor of all the Colt cartridge revolvers that have followed for the past 130 plus years. The idea for this revolver ranks right up there with the Mason ejector rod which likely would not have followed without this rare revolver having been built.
Ok here are the pics.






;)

will52100

I ain't for sure, but that looks like a colt "long cylinder" conversion and if I remember rite there is no way of knowing who built them only that they wern't quite up to colt's quality.
Buzzards gotta eat, same as worms

Fox Creek Kid


reno

Just wondering why people post pictures, then remove them?

Major 2

7 year old thread  :-\  maybe he no longer has photobucket , or drop the email addy it was set-up on.
when planets align...do the deal !

Graveyard Jack

7yr old thread and the OP is not even registered any more.
SASS #81,827

Major 2

when planets align...do the deal !

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