BruceB
05-01-2006, 05:55 AM
Yeah, I know it's the PBS Red Star Network, but I do like this one show. The episode last night was from Bismarck, North Dakota.
An elderly gent showed up with a VERY nice Bisley Colt, caliber unspecified, but the story was intriguing.
A Colt factory letter said the gun was shipped to a dealer in the Dakotas in early 1902, and the owner's great uncle bought it. In December of the same year, the great uncle got into a gunfight with "an Indian" and was killed. The death certificate and some other documents from the sheriff were on hand, including the info that the uncle managed to fire two rounds in the course of the encounter.
The gun was stashed for many years, and when the current owner unwrapped it from the cloth and holster, it was STILL LOADED with four live rounds and two empties!
Did the uncle not know of the one-empty-chamber rule? Did he know about it, and add that sixth round when the situation went downhill? I suppose the thing would have gone un-cleaned if those were the actual rounds from the fight, so what would the inside of the gun look like, with corrosive ammo and such?
Anyway, the expert consultant said the Bisley by itself was about a $5000 gun, but with the provenance so well-supported by the documents, etc., he placed the value in a good western auction at closer to $15,000.
It was a glimpse back into a time when reality was just outside the door, for sure!
An elderly gent showed up with a VERY nice Bisley Colt, caliber unspecified, but the story was intriguing.
A Colt factory letter said the gun was shipped to a dealer in the Dakotas in early 1902, and the owner's great uncle bought it. In December of the same year, the great uncle got into a gunfight with "an Indian" and was killed. The death certificate and some other documents from the sheriff were on hand, including the info that the uncle managed to fire two rounds in the course of the encounter.
The gun was stashed for many years, and when the current owner unwrapped it from the cloth and holster, it was STILL LOADED with four live rounds and two empties!
Did the uncle not know of the one-empty-chamber rule? Did he know about it, and add that sixth round when the situation went downhill? I suppose the thing would have gone un-cleaned if those were the actual rounds from the fight, so what would the inside of the gun look like, with corrosive ammo and such?
Anyway, the expert consultant said the Bisley by itself was about a $5000 gun, but with the provenance so well-supported by the documents, etc., he placed the value in a good western auction at closer to $15,000.
It was a glimpse back into a time when reality was just outside the door, for sure!