Boys, it's all I want for Christmas and I've been good this year.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz2kikh0Nz3
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Boys, it's all I want for Christmas and I've been good this year.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz2kikh0Nz3
I wonder if Jesse James (bike/hot-rod/Sandra Bullock fame) will get in on the bidding. Not sure if he still has the dough.
Interesting that when it turned up missing after the doctor's death, it showed up in a Senator's possession.
pretty cool piece of history
Mmm-hmm, yeah. Suuuure it is.....
The SAA came out in 1873, Jesse James was killed in 1882, and that gun got THAT beat up in 9 years? Where's the research on the mfg. date of that serial number? The gun went to Jesse's son after his death? Just how old was this son? Way too many holes in the story for me, but I bet some sucker will buy it.
Did firearms need a serial # before 1900? U.S. products were not required to be stamped "U.S." or "made in the U.S." until after about 1910. Was Colt different?
Yep, I can see about 1.6 million holes in the story.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/...53_634x348.jpg
Good questions and points made. For what it's worth, here's a link to the Auction House; apparently their attempt to bulwark the case for its authenticity.
http://historical.ha.com/c/item.zx?s...#1061410614414
The old photos show the front sight intact, the auction photos show the front sight broken off/removed. Exactly who broke it off/removed it, and when?
Sorry, I'll believe it when monkeys fly outta my ass.
Jessie was known to carry Schofields not Colts, as the top break action was much faster to reload on the fly.