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Historic Texas Colt Single Action

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military / Hand Guns - Revolvers Start Price:400.00 USD Estimated At:4,000.00 - 7,000.00 USD
Historic Texas Colt Single Action
Contact Brian Lebel's Old West Events prior to bidding if you have a lot inquiry.

Catalogs can be purchased by visiting: oldwestevents.com/catalogs
Colt revolver owned by, and passed through, the Wall family of the East Texas Redland's infamous Family Feud, the Broocks-Border-Wall Feud, circa 1900. The Wall brothers were boyhood enemies of Curg Border, a relative of the powerful Broocks family. Plenty of gunfights and killing ensued.

*S/N 202900, .38 WCF, 7 ½ inch barrel, blue and case color finish, replaced 2-piece stag grips. Circa 1900 (a big year in the Feud), the first year Single Actions were warranted for smokeless powder. Factory letter states shipment to Simmons Hardware, St Louis. Condition: bore is very good, traces of original blue in protected areas, 40% shadowy case color on frame; grips are excellent, excellent mechanically, excellent marks.

Includes Colt Factory Letter. Also included are two books on the subject: “Tales of Bad Men, Bad Women, and Bad Places: Four Centuries of Texas Outlawry" by C.F. Eckhardt; and “Gunsmoke in the Redlands" by Joseph Combs (signed by author). Includes copies of genealogical information on the Wall family to the current owner.

Provenance: Descended through the Wall family. Given to current owner in 1968 from his grandfather Frank Wall, who had received it from his father, Brune Wall, whose own father was Uncle Buck Wall.

* $100 FFL fee will be added to this purchase. All sales of firearms will be in accordance with Federal and State guidelines. All post-1898 firearms are subject to applicable ordinances and laws, and must be purchased in compliance with Federal and State law.

“…This divided the county right down the middle—Uncle Buck Wall was reported to have 200 men at his farm, ready to swoop down and clean Broockses and Borders out of San Augustine County, and the Broockses and the Borders were similarly prepared. Somebody yelled to Austin, and into town came the redoubtable Captain Bill MacDonald of the Texas Rangers.
Bill MacDonald was known as ‘the biggest mouth in the rangers,’ and the fact that he did talk a lot led some folks to think he was all talk. The survivors didn’t make that mistake again—but there weren’t a lot of survivors."
-- from “Tales of Bad Men, Bad Women, and Bad Places: Four Centuries of Texas Outlawry"