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U.S. Army Contract Civil War Colt Model 1860 Army Revolver

Currency:USD Category:Antiques / Firearms & Armory Start Price:2,000.00 USD Estimated At:3,750.00 - 5,500.00 USD
U.S. Army Contract Civil War Colt Model 1860 Army Revolver
Colt Model 1860 Army revolver manufactured in 1862. The revolver has a three-screw frame. The barrel, cylinder and backstrap have the Colt military blue finish. The frame, hammer and loading lever are casehardened and the trigger guard is brass. The one-piece walnut grip has an oil finish. The rebated cylinder is roll-engraved with the Texas Navy battle scene and "COLT'S PATENT NO./PAT. SEPT.10 1855". The top of the barrel is roll-stamped: "-ADDRESS COL. SAML COLT NEW-YORK U.S. AMERICA-" in one line. The left side of the frame is stamped: "COLTS/PATENT" in two lines. Single letter Ordnance sub-inspection marks are stamped on most major components. The full serial number, "65239" is stamped on the bottom of the barrel lug, frame, trigger guard, and backstrap. The partial serial number, "5239" is stamped on the cylinder arbor pin and cylinder. The wedge is not serial numbered. All of the visible serial numbers match. Ordnance inspection marks with script initials and oval borders are stamped on the lower portion of both sides of the grip. The Model 1860 Army revolver was the primary handgun issued to the Federal cavalry regiments between 1861 and 1863 and was widely used by both Federal and Confederate cavalry throughout the Civil War.
BBL: 8 inch
Stock:
Gauge: 44 percussion
Finish: blue
Grips: walnut
Serial Number: 65239


Very fine. The revolver retains approximately 40% of the original blue and 70% casehardened finish. The cylinder retains nearly all of the delicate roll-engraved naval battle scene. All of the markings and serial numbers are sharp. The revolver has minimal firing wear. The percussion nipples and rear face of the cylinder show only minor flash pitting. Five of the six safety pins are intact. The slightly undersized grip is in very fine condition with strong Ordnance inspection marks. Wear is limited to several minor handling marks on the right side of the grip. The hammer will not hold at full-cock. This is a crisp example of a U.S. Army contract Colt Model 1860 Army revolver.