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Talk:Griswold & Gunnison Revolver

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 09:21, 25 June 2013 by JaredChastain1 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The Griswold & Gunnison Revolver is a very fine piece of work. They were one of quite a few Southern-made copies of the excellent .36 caliber Colt Model 1851 Navy Revolver (or...")
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The Griswold & Gunnison Revolver is a very fine piece of work. They were one of quite a few Southern-made copies of the excellent .36 caliber Colt Model 1851 Navy Revolver (originally known as the Colt Revolving Belt Pistol of Naval Caliber. Another fine gun.) I don't have an original but I do have two copies of the Griswold & Gunnison that I am really proud of. The first is a reproduction by High Standard. It was made in about 1972 (I can't quite remember. I'll have to check again to make sure). I inherited it from my grandfather along with several other guns. When I got the gun it was in beautiful condition (it had barely been taken out of the box, although grandpa did handle and fire it a few times and of course clean it real good) and it still is. I don't shoot it too often anymore since it was my late grandpa's prized possession and is also pretty rare, but I do shoot it on occasion (special occasions naturally), especially when I wear one of my Confederate outfits or uniforms to my cousin Matt's for one of our reenactments. The other one I have is a reproduction by Pietta of Italy. It's not as high quality as the High Standard, but I shoot it on a regular basis and like it just as much as I do the High Standard reproduction. Aside from the Griswold & Gunnisons I have some more Brevete Colts such as a reproduction Schneider & Glassick imported by Hawes, a reproduction Leech & Rigdon (which really has similarities to the Colt 1860 Army as well), an original Rigdon & Ansley that an old Civil War Reenactor friend of mine gave me from his personal collection before he died (it was the only original Confederate revolver that he had. Most of his collection was old muzzle-loading rifles, some shotguns of all sorts, hunting rifles of various types, and a few reproductions of Old West guns), four Pietta reproductions of the J.H. Dance & Bros. Revolvers, three in .36 caliber and one in .44 caliber, a Uberti copy of an old Tucker & Sherrard (Southern revolver based on the Colt Model 1848 Dragoon Revolver with a few differences (if you ever see one of these in a Civil War movie it's an anachronism because, even though the Tucker & Sherrard revolvers were made during the civil war, the war ended before they could be issued and they were never sold or used until 1867)). I also have a Pietta copy of a Spiller & Burr revolver. A lot of people try to say that the Spiller & Burr is a cross between a Colt and a Remington, but that's bullshit. It was based on the Whitney revolver, not Colt or Remington.