I have recently been examining some of the statements I use when talking on these, the generality and the accuracy and how I can refine what I say and how I say it during presentations..
I have raided some of Curt's postings, which pretty much concur with the findings I was coming too. A pleasing revelation indeed.
This started with this list....
Colt Navy (All Models) 185,000 Plus
Colt Army (All Models) 150,000 Plus
Remington Army 147,000
Starr 37,000-45,000
Whitney 33,000
Colt Dragoons (All Models) 18,500
Savage Navy 12,000- 20,000
Remington Navy 7,000
Joslyn Revolver (Both Models) 3,000
Le-Mat 2,500
Spiller and Burr 1,451
Dance and Brother .44 500
Rogers and Spencer ( Disqalified ) 5,000
I have considered with care some of the things generally said,
Colts are fair safe "They were the most common." OK "They outnumbered the next best competitor by 3-1" Including all models yes!
Then it went wrong!! "Remington's are the second most common.." Only if were are talking about all models, or the Army!! The Navy is way down the list ..
Well I knew the Strarr Models were next an thought them a fair safe third place, But Whitney is not far behind. These guys never get enough press and are clearly worth a mention in any display talk...
In last place as a relevant substantial numbers revolver comes the Savage. Interesting, but not going to dwell on that.
What annoys me is that when I hear people talk about the revolvers they seem to talk about Remingtons, Colts and Le Matts, in fact I have seen several bad replica's of these monsters a several UK reenactments.
IMHO The Le Matt fails to qualify as common Civil war revolver, as does most of the bottom list. They are interesting oddities, unit specific and relevant only, in many cases as to what they copied .. Colt - Dance, Whitney - Spiller and Burr.
For me the discussion should be, do we include the Savage as a common Revolver?
brass frames... I have replaced all of mine with steel. Curt's previous article on this nails it. The one Brass frame that really antagonists me is the Remington Texas.. WTF?
Simpy put...Never existed..
Anyway my intention is to write an article in the mainstream newsletter accentuating this list and the weighting of it's components.
But before I do, please throw corrections, additions and amendments at me..
I have raided some of Curt's postings, which pretty much concur with the findings I was coming too. A pleasing revelation indeed.
This started with this list....
Colt Navy (All Models) 185,000 Plus
Colt Army (All Models) 150,000 Plus
Remington Army 147,000
Starr 37,000-45,000
Whitney 33,000
Colt Dragoons (All Models) 18,500
Savage Navy 12,000- 20,000
Remington Navy 7,000
Joslyn Revolver (Both Models) 3,000
Le-Mat 2,500
Spiller and Burr 1,451
Dance and Brother .44 500
Rogers and Spencer ( Disqalified ) 5,000
I have considered with care some of the things generally said,
Colts are fair safe "They were the most common." OK "They outnumbered the next best competitor by 3-1" Including all models yes!
Then it went wrong!! "Remington's are the second most common.." Only if were are talking about all models, or the Army!! The Navy is way down the list ..
Well I knew the Strarr Models were next an thought them a fair safe third place, But Whitney is not far behind. These guys never get enough press and are clearly worth a mention in any display talk...
In last place as a relevant substantial numbers revolver comes the Savage. Interesting, but not going to dwell on that.
What annoys me is that when I hear people talk about the revolvers they seem to talk about Remingtons, Colts and Le Matts, in fact I have seen several bad replica's of these monsters a several UK reenactments.
IMHO The Le Matt fails to qualify as common Civil war revolver, as does most of the bottom list. They are interesting oddities, unit specific and relevant only, in many cases as to what they copied .. Colt - Dance, Whitney - Spiller and Burr.
For me the discussion should be, do we include the Savage as a common Revolver?
brass frames... I have replaced all of mine with steel. Curt's previous article on this nails it. The one Brass frame that really antagonists me is the Remington Texas.. WTF?
Simpy put...Never existed..
Anyway my intention is to write an article in the mainstream newsletter accentuating this list and the weighting of it's components.
But before I do, please throw corrections, additions and amendments at me..
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