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Another really nice one, Troy. Thanks for sharing the photos.
topaz: I can't really say for sure from your photos...but your pistol appears to be Parkerized rather than blued. Can you show some macro images in some better lighting w/o flash? Thanks.
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07-08-2012 09:00 PM
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Thank`s Scott the Blk Army was my first Gunbroker buy I won the auction at a bit over 3k and the seller said it was 95% cond boy I would like to see what he calls 99% cond gun. From what he told me it was his grandfathers gun and he did not want to sell it but he built a new house and could not sell his old house . The pic`s he had posted were very dark and I think that kept most bidders away . I was very happy when the gun showed up after all it was the first auction I won on GB .The mag was the only thing that was not correct .I did own one other Blk Army when I won this one but the fronstrap was a bit spotted with some browning this one is all there and it`s one of the best honest Blk Army gun`s I have seen.Did you notice the cutter mark in the lh side of the trigger well it did not clean up in polishing , the gun is ruff as a cob but the finish has held on well it was very close to the USMC shippment missed it by like 3 day`s I had to get a letter on it to see if it was USMC or Navy was very close to that shippment too ,not either but it`s cool that it went to Wash DC look`s like it sat in a desk or what ever . Do you know anything about the one`s that went to DC I cannot find out anything about them as far as what they were sent there for .
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Originally Posted by
prewar
...Do you know anything about the one`s that went to DC I cannot find out anything about them as far as what they were sent there for .
No, sorry. DC is sort of generic, as every branch of service has facilities and personnel there, and always will, being the national capitol. It would take records specifically for that pistol (like an SRS hit) to really know. One of my 1924 pistols has a hit to DC in the National Archives. It showed up in SRS as a USCG pistol. Turned out to be one of the best "hits" I've got. I ended up getting records that show 604 different documented U.S. Coast Guard pistols as of late 1936.
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Originally Posted by
Ray LaChance
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
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...06/31821-1.jpg
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...06/31831-1.jpg
it looks like there a second, larger lanyard ring. What's the scoop on these?
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The larger lanyard loop is on the magazine. The pistol shown would not have been shipped with a lanyard loop magazine, as they were discontinued with the end of 1915 production. They still used the lanyard loop magazines, but after serial number 125566 new pistols were shipped with a plain base magazine.