BIRTH OF THE FIVE- AND SIX-SHOOTERS: A HISTORY OF COLT FIREARMS
(COLT, Samuel) HAVEN, Charles T. and BELDEN, Frank A. A History of the Colt Revolver, and the Other Arms Made by Colt’s Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing Company from 1836 to 1940. New York: William Morrow, 1940. Thick quarto, publisher’s dark green pebbled cloth, slipcase.
First edition of this comprehensive history of the Colt Fire Arms Manufacturing Company, with photographs and descriptions of every type of gun, and extensive remarks.
“Colt was the most dashing and adventurous of all the pioneers of the machine shop in America” (Mary Bellis). While working as a seaman, Colt got the idea of designing a pistol with a revolving cylinder that contained several bullets which could be fired through a single barrel. In 1835 he patented his revolutionary five-shot revolver, transforming a simple single-shot firearm into a multi-shot device. John Coffee Hays was among Colt’s early customers, obtaining the new revolvers for his famous Texas Rangers. In 1847 Colt introduced the six-shot Walker revolver, 1000 of which the U.S. government purchased for use in the Mexican War. By 1855 Colt owned the largest private arms manufacturing facility in the world. During the Civil War, Colt sold to both sides—altogether 300,000 revolvers and 100,000 rifles. His most popular gun, the Peacemaker, was produced for the first time in 1873. This comprehensive history of the Colt Company up to 1940 provides an outline of the antique and obsolete models of Colt arms and their several variations, numerous documents contemporaneous to the manufacture of Colt arms, and facsimiles of the original patents on the Colt revolver.
Fine condition.