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06-17-2012 09:12 PM
# ADS
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Great photos of a great example that has endured the test of time and retained finish. It obviously hasn't been handled or used much. Thanks for posting.
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My "Black Army"
Well, for whatever the reason, I got caught by the 1911 bug 2 years ago. When I was at a gun show, a nice looking 1911 described by the seller as "rare" Black Army, caught my eye. After a little research on my iPad, I had to have it, but I couldn't pin point exactly why.
Naive for sure, but I lucked out on this one. I stumbled upon Scott's M1911info.com along with lots of his and your posts on another forum and got hooked.
When I sent it to Scott along with a dog A1 (I bought from the same guy) for inspection, I was pleasantly surprised to hear back that the mystical Black Army, was not only all original, but it was also one of the nicer ones that he inspected.
Two years later I know what the seller unintentionally meant by "rare" Black Army. The rarity comes from it's originality in such great condition compared to almost others I've seen since.
So whatever that Black Army magic was, it worked on me......
Here are a couple pics of my with credit to Scott Gahimer @ M1911info.com.
Per Colt Archive letter:
S/N - 555979
Sold To: US Governement
Shipped to: Ordnance Officer, Big Bend District, Marfa TX
Shipped: Jan 9, 1919
Mfg'd: Dec 4, 1918
Guns in Shipment: 100

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I guess my Colt Tier III 100 Years Anniversary pistol is patterned after these pistols.
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The analogy of the Model 1911 "Black Army" and the P.08 "Black Widow" pretty well parallel each other. Late in P.08 production black plastic grips and magazine bottoms were an approved substitute when wood was not available. No one liked the plastic grips, and the pistols did not sell well. According to the late Ralph Shattuck, he coined the term "Black Widow" for these pistols, and suddenly the black gripped pistols became highly desirable and everyone had to have one.
Now a Model 1911 with virtually no finish becomes desirable because it is a "Black Army".
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What was the last serial no`s on the black guns . I have a 6046** . It shows its age Bill
Last edited by topaz; 06-18-2012 at 09:44 AM.
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Attachment 34587Attachment 34586
This is what I have , Thanks for looking
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Originally Posted by
topaz
What was the last serial no`s on the black guns . I have a 6046** . It shows its age Bill
I think they ended around serial number 620000 to 630000, but I read somewhere that polished blue guns where intermixed with black finish late in production in 1919, so determining the vey last s/n may be very difficult.
I need to look it up unless someone else knows before I get to it.
Ray
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The last Colt M1911 reported procured by the U.S. govt. was s/n 629500.
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Close serl number this one went to Wash DC in dec 1918 one of 1000 that went to Wash DC got fac letter on it .