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        LOT 1231
Well-Documented Henry Nettleton Sub- Inspected New York Militia U.S. Colt Cavalry Model Single Action Army Revolver with Factory Letter and Kopec Letter - Serial no. 47614, 45 LC cal., 7 1/2 inch round bbl., blue/casehardened finish, walnut grips. This Colt Single Action Cavalry Model revolver was manufactured in 1878 and inspected by Ordnance Sub-Inspector Henry Nettleton. This revolver was one of 800 pistols refurbished by Colt in 1895 and issued to the
New York State Militia. These revolvers retained their original 7 1/2 inch barrels and matching serial numbers. Most of the revolvers refurbished in 1895 had the hammers refinished a fiery niter blue like this one. The factory letter lists this revolver as one of 200 delivered to the inspector at the Colt factory on September 13, 1878, and also indicates it was later
refurbished at the factory (not converted to an “Artillery Model”) and redelivered to the government inspector at Colt on October 11, 1895. The revolver is listed by serial number as issued to the New York Militia on page 60 and shown in a photograph on page 137 of “Colt Cavalry & Artillery Revolvers, A Continuing Study” by Kopec and Fenn. A letter from John Kopec is also included. He notes that it was previously owned by Conrad Sundeen and “this revolver shows up as being one of the first 800 Cavalry revolvers which were refurbished for the U.S. Government in 1895 and later issued to the New York Militia.” The revolver has the early “black powder” frame, a blade front sight, the one-line barrel address, a bulls-eye ejector rod button, “P” and “HN” on the bottom of the barrel ahead of the cylinder pin, “HN” inspection marks repeated on the bottom of the frame and trigger guard as well as the top of the back strap behind the hammer and side of the cylinder, the three-line patent marking followed by “U S” (without periods which is correct for Nettleton), and all matching serial numbers. It comes in a modern display case with a 69th New York badge and a coordinating display label along with a golden H.W. Sakschek seal inside the lid, a cartridge block with nine cartridges, an L-shaped screwdriver, key on a Portsmouth Port Rifle & Revolver Meeting medallion, and the Kopec letter. The 69th New York Infantry were called up for active service during the Spanish-American War and were also sent to the Mexican border during the Punitive Expedition of 1916-1917 against Pancho Villa. CONDITION: Very good as factory refurbished. The revolver mostly displays a mottled dark gray patina but retains strong patches of factory refurbished blue finish and case colors in some of the protected areas and especially vibrant niter blue on the back of the hammer and sides of the trigger. The grip is also very good and has minor dings and scratches, mild edge wear, and some hammering marks on the butt. Mechanically excellent. Provenance: The Buckstix Collection. Estimate: 5,500 - 8,500
LOT 1232
U.S. Springfield Model 1884 Trapdoor Rifle with Indian Affairs Sale Tag - Serial no. 299084, 45-70 Government cal., 32 5/8 inch round bbl., blue/casehardened finish, walnut stock. Blued barrel, receiver, hammer,
trigger guard, buttplate and barrel band. Blade
front and Buffington windage adjustable ladder
rear sights, two-piece trigger guard and trigger bar assembly, serrated trigger, iron cleaning rod and smooth buttplate with no trapdoor. Casehardened breechblock and receiver tang. Left side breech end
of barrel marked with “V/P/eagle head” proofmarks. Low arch breechblock marked “US/MODEL/1884”. The standard lock plate is marked with the American eagle
next to “U. S./SPRINGFIELD”. The heel of the buttplate is marked “US”. Includes a metal hang tag affixed to the front sling swivel marked “U.S. DEPT. OF INDIAN AFFAIRS/APPROVED SALE/No 33/RIFLE & AMMO/INDIAN POLICE 1888”
CONDITION: Fine, retaining 50% arsenal refinished blue finish overall thinning to a brown patina with some patches of light pitting. Stock is very good as refinished with some light handling marks, a crack behind the lock, and a small crack on the right of the ramrod channel. Mechanically fine, although the thumb piece for the breech block falls off easily.
Provenance: The Robert B. “Bob” Berryman Estate Collection.
Estimate: 1,000 - 1,500
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