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- COLT NAVY
-
- The first repeating handgun
- light and handy enough to see
- use as a personal defense
- sidearm was the Colt 1851 Navy
- model, chambered in .36 caliber.
- The earlier Walker and Dragoon
- Colts (in .44) were bulky and
- heavy affairs, best used as
- saddle guns. The Navy had the
- same fine balance and pointing
- characteristics that were later
- reincarnated in the .44 1860
- Army and, still later, in the
- .45 Peacemaker of 1873 (both of
- Colt manufacture). The Navy was
- a muzzle-loading percussion arm
- of single action design, with a
- cylinder capacity of six rounds
- (although the prudent pistol
- packer carried the gun with only
- five rounds loaded and the
- hammer down on an empty
- chamber).
-
- The length of time required
- for reloading, common to all cap
- and ball revolvers, was
- sometimes overcome by carrying
- an auxiliary cylinder unit,
- pre-charged with powder and
- ball, which could be slipped
- into place after removal of the
- empty cylinder. An even quicker
- and more straightforward method
- of achieving rapid follow-up
- shots was to carry an additional
- revolver. J.B. Hickok ("Wild
- Bill," to dime novelists)
- carried two ivory-handled Navy
- Colts in a red sash around his
- waist; some of Mosby's
- Confederate Rangers, with horses
- to do the lugging, carried as
- many as eight loaded Navies
- ready for action.
-
- The storied Mr. Hickok was
- said to be capable of
- outstanding ambidextrous
- marksmanship with either hand,
- to the extent that he could keep
- a tin can bouncing in front of
- him as he walked forward firing
- alternately with left- and
- right-hand pistols.
-