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Lot 3205:Wm. H. Vanderbilt Cased Engraved Colt 1851 Navy with Carved Grip

May 19th, 2024|Bedford, TX
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Lot 3205:Wm. H. Vanderbilt Cased Engraved Colt 1851 Navy with Carved Grip

May 19th, 2024|Bedford, TX
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Estimated Price$40,000 - $65,000
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Historic Documented Cased Factory Engraved Colt Model 1851 Navy Percussion Revolver with Extraordinary Relief Carved Grip Formerly in the William M. Locke Collection and Identified as Presented to William H. Vanderbilt

Dating to 1859, this beautiful deluxe Colt Model 1851 Navy revolver features beautiful factory engraving consisting of Germanic style scrollwork inhabited by a dog or bear's head on the left by the wedge, floral blooms, beaded backgrounds, rayed/shell accents, a dot motif along the edge of the barrel lug on the left, and beaded backgrounds. The hammer features the classic dog/wolf head motif. The left side of the frame features the inscribed "COLTS/PATENT" marking rather than the usual stamped marking. The patterns are similar to the example attributed to Georg Sterzing on page 83 of "Colt Factory Engravers of the Nineteenth Century" by Herbert Houze. His style is very similar to the work of Gustave Young who would have been out of the country at the time. The barrel features a dovetailed blade front sight and the "-ADDRESS SAML COLT HARTFORD CT.-" address. The left side of the trigger guard has a "3". Matching serial numbers are visible on the cylinder, loading lever (partial), barrel lug, frame, trigger guard, and back strap, and the factory dot marking denoting special finishing and/or engraving is stamped above or below the serial numbers along the bottom of the revolver. The grip features a highly detailed raised relief carved bust of a dragoon officer. The revolver comes in a fitted case with wine colored lining, several projectiles, key, cartridge pack, blued L-shaped combination tool, Colt patent martial pattern flask with angled charger, blued ball/bullet mold, and an Eley Bros. cap tin. This stunning revolver is featured in "The William M. Locke Collection" by Frank Sellers. The revolver is first illustrated on page 6 within a selection of Colt Model 1851 Navy revolvers with a variety of carved grips that are illustrated again on page 103, and the cased set is then illustrated and described on page 106 where Sellers states: "Accompanying this revolver are letters and affidavits tracing the history of this gun from its original presentation by the Colt factory to William H. Vanderbilt, aide de camp to the Prince of Wales when he was on a visit to this country in 1865. Passed down through the family of Vanderbilt to an H.R. Lehman who sold it in 1936 to George W. Pariso whose collection was sold at auction in the early 1940's." It is also illustrated on page 85 of "Colt Engraving" by R.L. Wilson where it is noted as having been "accompanied by papers documenting its presentation to William H. Vanderbilt by the factory (papers have since been lost)", and the historical attribution is discussed in the include 1979 letter from Arnold Marcus Chernoff to Dr. Jon Parker to whom he had recently sold the set. Per Chernoff, the original provenance documentation, which he had personally seen, had been lost after the set was sold from Locke's collection. Without the documentation, the revolver's origin story has been difficult to pin down, and at least some of the history appears to be confused. Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, (1841-1910), later King Edward VII, was the first Prince of Wales to tour North America and visited British North America (present day Canada) and the United Sates, but he made this tour in 1860 when he was just 18 rather than 1865. The revolver being presented in 1860 would be more logical given it was produced in around the latter part of 1859. The trip was initially planned to only include present day Canada, but the prince was invited by President James Buchanan as well as by the leading men of New York, and additional cities subsequently extended invitations. The young prince saw much of the country by train in a short period and was hosted by leading men at many of his various stops, sometimes harassed by rowdy crowds, particularly by Irish-Americans. After his arrival in New York City on October 11, 1860, he was honored by multiple large parades, and a ball on the evening of October 12 at the Academy of Music paid for by 400 members of the New York elite who each contributed $100. Thousands of guests showed up, leading to the floor partially caving under their weight, and the prince was moved away from the crown to the safety of the super room with the elite and later returned to dance with some of the ladies in the ballroom. He subsequently visited the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Boston, and then finally Portland, Maine, before returning home. Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877) of New York was one of the most powerful and wealthy businessmen and a dominating figure in the transportation industry, particularly steamboats and steamships. He was among the elite men involved in the festivities surrounding the Prince of Wales's visit to New York. The "Commodore" himself was also presented a cased Colt London '51 Navy by Samuel Colt that Rock Island Auction Company sold for $109,250 in September 2012 (catalog 56, lot 1195). We can find no documentation indicating that his eldest son, William Henry Vanderbilt (1821-1885), served as an aide-de-camp during the prince's visit. He had a contentious relationship with his father as a boy and young man and ran the family's farms on Staten Island starting in 1840 and by the 1860s was involved in the family's increasing interests in railroads and became a key figure in the Vanderbilt railroad empire, including as the vice president of the New York & Harlem Railroad Company in the 1860s. As the eldest son, he inherited control of the Vanderbilt businesses and much of his father's fortune in 1877 and is believed to have doubled the family fortune to $200 million in less than a decade. H.R. Lehman may have been given the revolver by one of William Henry Vanderbilt's nine children or many grandchildren before selling the revolver to George W. Pariso in 1936. Provenance: The Vanderbilt Family; H.R. Lehman; The George W. Pariso Collection; The William M. Locke Collection; Arnold Marcus Chernoff, Ltd.; The Dr. Jon Parker Collection; Property of a Gentleman

ConditionExceptionally fine with crisp engraving and markings, 80% plus bright original high polish blue finish, 85% plus original case colors, 95% original silver plating with attractively aged patina, smooth brown and gray patina on the balance, a series of dings and scratches near the muzzle, and otherwise mostly only minor age and storage related wear. The grip is also exceptionally fine and has crisp raised relief carving, attractive natural patina and grain, minor stress lines at the butt and right side, and slight edge wear. Mechanically excellent. The case and accessories are very fine and have mostly minor age and storage related wear such as contact staining on the lining. Overall, a very beautiful pre-Civil War factory engraved Colt Model 1851 Navy complete with a very scarce relief carved dragoon grip and accessories. With its published historical association, deluxe factory embellishment, and extraordinary condition, this revolver is among the most desirable Model 1851 Navy revolvers extant!
Details
ManufacturerColt
Model1851 Navy
TypeRevolver
Serial number
ClassAntique
Caliber / Gauge36
Barrel7 1/2 inch octagon
Finishblue/casehardened/silver
Gripantique ivory

Item LocationBedford, TX
Views2061
Catalog page126
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