Billy the kid's rifle

Started by Tubac, September 25, 2007, 03:58:31 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Tubac

Hi gents,
Does anyone know if the Serial number of the Whitney-Kennedy Rifle taken from the kid by Sheriff van Patten is published
anywhere? Looked on google with no luck.
Thanks,

Tubac
from the Confederate Territory of Arizona

Tubac

The (alleged) rifle is in the Gene Autry museum. Is there an inventory of the museum's firearms avaiable?
Thanks again.

Tubac
from the Confederate Territory of Arizona

St. George

'Alleged' is an excellent term to use, when describing firearms of certain notables - there seem to be a helluva lot of guns around that were owned by them...

You might want to contact the Museum Curator and ask.

There should be an Inventory Control sheet readily to hand.

Vaya,

Scouts Out!
"It Wasn't Cowboys and Ponies - It Was Horses and Men.
It Wasn't Schoolboys and Ladies - It Was Cowtowns and Sin..."

Tubac

Thanks St. George,
I didn't want to sound "snotty", but I don't know the provenance(spelling?) of the rifle.
A letter from van Patten saying that rifle #xxxx was taken from Wm. Bonney or a court document
listing evidence is one thing, "my granny said, that her uncle told her..." is another. ;)

Tubac
from the Confederate Territory of Arizona

Tubac

St. George and other gents,

If anyone cares, the serial number on the Whitney-Kennedy rifle that the Autry museum says belonged to
Billy the Kid is 808. Pat Garrett lists an 1873 Winchester captured and a .44/40 Colt SAA, but no Whitney-
Kennedy. Curious.

Tubac
from the Confederate Territory of Arizona

gunplay

I saw the rifle in Nevada years ago with a painting of Billy  holding the rifle.  The painting certainly did not look like the one tintype of him..  Bad guys certainly owned a lot of guns.  Jesse James had dozens which his mother sold to tourists.  Bat Masterson in his later years in New York did the same.

Harve Curry

The way I understood it, the 1873 carbine and the Colt SAA in the famous photo of Billy standing, those guns were from the deceased Charlie Bowdre.

Fox Creek Kid

His '73 Win. was in the Texas Ranger Museum in 1996 if I remember correctly, as well as the shotgun used to kill Bob Olinger.

© 1995 - 2024 CAScity.com