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Superb Pair of Gold Banded, Silver Furnished, Engraved and Inscribed Philadelphia Deringer Percussio

Currency:USD Category:Antiques / Firearms & Armory Start Price:30,000.00 USD Estimated At:60,000.00 - 80,000.00 USD
Superb Pair of Gold Banded, Silver Furnished, Engraved and Inscribed Philadelphia Deringer Percussio
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This cased pair is of the highest possible quality attained by Henry Deringer. They are very important in being early examples of his pocket model and from their overall form and the style of their front trigger guard tangs they are likely to date between 1859 and 1861. The back-action locks are of casehardened steel, engraved with a serpentine border with leaf scrolls and stamped behind the cock "DERINGER PHILADEL". The half stock of walnut with checkered grips and beaked butts, some mounts are of coin silver and some of German silver, on each pistol the trigger guard, side plate, and single barrel slide washers are of silver, as is the cover plate between the front of the lock and the nipple bolster mounts. The foreend cap is of German silver as is the buttcap that has a hinged circular butt-trap cover. The larger mounts are engraved with leaf scrolls, the side plate is decoratively shaped in scroll pattern, the slide washers have opposed thistle finials and the front tang of the trigger guard is formed with a pineapple finial. Urn shaped gold back strap shields engraved with leaf scrolls bordering the superimposed initials "AWB" above the date 1884. The wooden ramrods with brass tips are retained by a single plain pipe beneath the barrel. The scroll trigger is of blue steel and has ahead of it in the steel trigger plate a pierced cylindrical trigger adjusting screw. Octagonal barrels rifled with seven grooves with a marbled brown finish to all except the breech which is casehardened between bands of ten karat gold. The top flat of the breech is stamped "DERINGER PHILADEL" and the left flat with a "P" flanked by feathered arcs. A German silver leaf foresight is set on a silver block dovetail into the barrel just to the rear of the muzzle. In a letter written by noted author and collector L.D. Eberhart states; "I have just had the pleasure of inspecting the finest pair of Henry Deringer Pistols that I have ever seen in 55 years of collecting these wonderful guns. Not only are the pistols as issued, but they still retain the gold oxide in a high percentage of the lightening stripes on the barrels, this is nearly always missing if the barrels have been cleaned at all. The interior of the case is lined with purple cotton velour which is completely correct. I have had three of the eleven sets I owned over the years that were covered with this same material. The accessories are also special in that the flask is not the common oak leaf flask seen in most, sets but the larger size with the longer top and spout normally reserved for Duelers of larger pistols of this size. Also seldom seen in these sets is a bullet puller, all other pieces are what are found in the regular sets. The wooden casing is of brass banded deluxe rosewood. The case top has a recessed folding brass carrying handle that was an extra feature, generally reserved for dueling pistol cases. The extra deluxe case was made by a master case maker who was at the top of his work class." As for the tremendous history associated with this beautiful case Mr. Eberhart writes; "By family tradition these pistols were owned by Thomas Jefferson Brady (1839-1904) who was born at Muncie, Indiana, and educated at Ashby College where he studied law. At the outbreak of the Civil War he raised the first company that went to fight from Delaware County. It would have been presumably around this time that he purchased and carried our pistols. Thereafter he served in the Indiana Infantry and then the Indiana volunteer Infantry. He had risen to the rank of brevet Brigadier General by the time his military service came to an end in 1865. He purchased the Muncie Times in 1868, selling it in 1870 when President Grant appointed him US Consul to the West Indies of St. Thomas where he served until 1875. In 1876 he became a supervisor in the internal revenue Service and from 1876 to the end of his active working career in 1881 he served as 2nd Assistant Postmaster General. Thomas Jefferson Brady married Emmeline Wolfe in 1864 and it was to their son, Arthur W. Brady, born just one year after the marriage in 1865, that the pistols were presented to Authur W. Brady, that the gold shields were engraved to him. Authur obtained a BA Degree from Yale, Class of 1877. He got his law degree at the University of Michigan in 1889. He later became the youngest Mayor of Muncie, Indiana." A complete family bio accompanies the Eberhart letter. We at Rock Island Auction Company wish to extended our appreciation and praise to the respected author and collector: L.D. Eberhart for the time and scholarship in researching and writing this description. PROVENANCE: Brady Family by descent. Literature; Blackmore "The Percussion System, C. Blair, "Feltham" pg. 178, L.D. Eberhart and Wilson "The Deringer in America" Vol. 1.
BBL: 4 1/2 inch flat top
Stock:
Gauge: 48
Finish: brown striped/casehardened/silver
Grips: deluxe walnut
Serial Number: NSN
Condition: Excellent plus, with 98% plus of the original bronzed stripe finish, showing a small bright area on the lower right side of the barrel and a few tiny handling marks. A brown and gray patina is forming on the rear sections of the lock plate, tang and hammer, with vivid casehardened colors on the hammer head, bolster and breech. Stock is excellent, with a stress crack on the left side of the upper tang, a few minor handling marks on the wood and furniture, and a superb grain pattern overall. The case is very fine, with some fading and wear of the liner, a ding present on the rear section of the lid, a hairline crack to the side of the lid handle. Mechanically excellent.

B) As described in A.
BBL: 4 1/2 inch flat top
Stock:
Gauge: 48
Finish: brown/casehardened/gold
Grips: walnut
Serial Number: NSN
Condition: Excellent, with 99% of the original bronzed finish, showing a few attractive hints of copper color, along with some minor dings. Strong, bright case colors are present in the protected areas, with a mixed brown and gray patina forming on the open areas. Stock is excellent, with a small crack extending from the left side of the breech, a small section of replaced wood behind the inscription shield, a few minor dents and attractive grain. Mechanically excellent. A superb pair of Henry Deringer pistols, some of the finest demonstrators of the proprietary and signature "bronzed" finish yet seen at auction, in addition to their role as the personal arms of a Union General and post-War government figure.