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     LOT 1119
Desirable and Very Fine U.S. Martially Inspected Civil War Remington Model 1861 Army
Percussion Revolver - Serial no. 5068, 44 cal., 8 inch octagon bbl., blue finish, walnut grips. Only 6,000 of these Dec. 17, 1861 patent Army revolvers were
manufactured in 1862 before production shifted to the New Model series. The army found the ability to slide the cylinder pin out with the loading lever closed to be too insecure for battlefield use. Many of the 1861s were altered by adding a screw on the loading lever, but this example has not been
altered and is a late production revolver with safety notches on the cylinder. It has a German silver cone front sight, the two-line patent and address markings on the top of the barrel, small single letter inspection initials on various components and a boxed script “BH” (Benjamin Hannis) inspection cartouche stamped on the left grip panel. Matching serial number “5068” marked on the left of the grip frame, rear face of the cylinder, bottom of the barrel
(double struck, factory error) and handwritten underneath both grip panels. CONDITION: Very fine, retains 70% plus original bright blue finish, strongest on the barrel, with scattered light flaking to a smooth brown
patina, a moderate cylinder drag line, and sharp markings and edges in the metal overall. Grips are also very fine with rich oil finish and defined edges, some light scratches and handling marks, and an exceptionally crisp cartouche. Mechanically excellent.
Estimate: 5,000 - 7,500
     96
LOT 1120 Civil War Rogers & Spencer Army Model Revolver - Serial no. 1934, 44
percussion cal., 7 1/2 inch bbl., blue finish, cartouched walnut grips. This is a very fine example of a U.S. contract percussion revolver that was manufactured by Rogers, Spencer & Co., of Willow Dale, New York in 1865. The Rogers & Spencer Co., was awarded a contract by the Ordnance Department for 5,000 .44 caliber revolvers in
November, 1864. When the Civil War ended in April, 1865, 1,500 revolvers had been delivered; the remaining 3,500 were delivered by September 1865. The revolvers were apparently never issued and were subsequently sold by military surplus dealer Francis Bannerman. This well designed revolver has a full octagon barrel with nickel-silver cone front sight. The solid frame has a sighting groove on the top strap. The revolver has a six-
shot cylinder with safety notches between the chambers. The two-piece walnut grips have a flared butt. The revolver barrel, frame, cylinder, trigger guard and back strap have a high polish blue finish and the loading lever, hammer and trigger have a dark color casehardened finish. The top strap is roll-stamped: “RODGERS & SPENCER/UTICA, N.Y.” on either side of the sight groove. The serial number, “1934” is stamped on the underside of the barrel, loading lever, cylinder, and bottom of the back strap. All of the visible serial numbers match. Small Ordnance “B” sub-inspection marks are stamped on each component. The lower left grip is stamped with an Ordnance inspection mark which consists of the script initials “RBP” enclosed in a rectangle. CONDITION: Very fine. The revolver retains 70% of the original high polish blue and color casehardened finishes. The blue on the top and sides of the barrel is thin while the bottom flat has nearly all of the finish. The frame has about 80% of the blue finish with high-point wear, light scratches and some traces of flash pitting on the top strap above the percussion nipples. Most of the blue finish is present on the cylinder. The percussion nipples and adjacent portions of the cylinder show some light flash pitting. The blue finish on the grips straps is thin. The hammer and trigger retain nearly all of the dark color casehardened finish. The case colors on the exposed areas of the loading lever have faded to a brown patina. The grips are in very fine condition with a raised grain and extremely sharp Ordnance inspection mark. The top strap legend, serial numbers and Ordnance sub-inspection marks are all sharp. The action functions perfectly. This is a solid representative example of a U.S. contract Civil War Rogers & Spencer Army Model revolver. Estimate: 3,500 - 4,750
 





















































































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