1862 Police Pocket antique shooter

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I have long been partial to the .36-caliber 1862 Police Pocket. To me, it's the epitomy of BP design elegance and power/balance/function -- although I also fancy the tidy 1849 Pocket.

Thanks to availability and relatively low price, I was scouring the web for a shootable '49 antique when I happened upon a 4.5-inch '62 PP listed for what seemed to me to be a very reasonable under $1k price.

A call and a few emails later, and this Civil War-era example (manuf. 1863) was all mine. Upon inspection and disassembly, it proved to be at least as good as described on the collectorsfirearms.com's website, with tight lock-up and reliable action for every cylinder, all numbers-matching, and best-of-all, shootable. I have yet to do so, and when I do, it'll be with all due care, but until then, it gets a prime spot in my vault, cozying up to my Uberti 5.5" replica.

I'm still looking for an in-my-price-range shootable '49, but this beauty has definitely won me over.

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I have long been partial to the .36-caliber 1862 Police Pocket. To me, it's the epitomy of BP design elegance and power/balance/function -- although I also fancy the tidy 1849 Pocket.

Thanks to availability and relatively low price, I was scouring the web for a shootable '49 antique when I happened upon a 4.5-inch '62 PP listed for what seemed to me to be a very reasonable under $1k price.

A call and a few emails later, and this Civil War-era example (manuf. 1863) was all mine. Upon inspection and disassembly, it proved to be at least as good as described on the collectorsfirearms.com's website, with tight lock-up and reliable action for every cylinder, all numbers-matching, and best-of-all, shootable. I have yet to do so, and when I do, it'll be with all due care, but until then, it gets a prime spot in my vault, cozying up to my Uberti 5.5" replica.

I'm still looking for an in-my-price-range shootable '49, but this beauty has definitely won me over.

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Nice find on that “62”Colt Police. The pair look like they could be brothers. One a bit younger of course.
Also it’s good to know they are shooters too.
I just got done working on my “62” pocket model yesterday. The cut barrel was a donor 6.5” I scrounged from a going out of business gun shop.
I decided to make it just a poker chip thickness shorter than the Colt Trapper model.
A little of this and that on the finish or I should say, lack of finish it’s now my “Little Darling”.
Good luck shooting your 62s my friend. A bit less fun to loading maybe, but great to shoot.
I have long been partial to the .36-caliber 1862 Police Pocket. To me, it's the epitomy of BP design elegance and power/balance/function -- although I also fancy the tidy 1849 Pocket.

Thanks to availability and relatively low price, I was scouring the web for a shootable '49 antique when I happened upon a 4.5-inch '62 PP listed for what seemed to me to be a very reasonable under $1k price.

A call and a few emails later, and this Civil War-era example (manuf. 1863) was all mine. Upon inspection and disassembly, it proved to be at least as good as described on the collectorsfirearms.com's website, with tight lock-up and reliable action for every cylinder, all numbers-matching, and best-of-all, shootable. I have yet to do so, and when I do, it'll be with all due care, but until then, it gets a prime spot in my vault, cozying up to my Uberti 5.5" replica.

I'm still looking for an in-my-price-range shootable '49, but this beauty has definitely won me over.

View attachment 295121
View attachment 295122
View attachment 295124
 

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I have long been partial to the .36-caliber 1862 Police Pocket. To me, it's the epitomy of BP design elegance and power/balance/function -- although I also fancy the tidy 1849 Pocket.

Thanks to availability and relatively low price, I was scouring the web for a shootable '49 antique when I happened upon a 4.5-inch '62 PP listed for what seemed to me to be a very reasonable under $1k price.

A call and a few emails later, and this Civil War-era example (manuf. 1863) was all mine. Upon inspection and disassembly, it proved to be at least as good as described on the collectorsfirearms.com's website, with tight lock-up and reliable action for every cylinder, all numbers-matching, and best-of-all, shootable. I have yet to do so, and when I do, it'll be with all due care, but until then, it gets a prime spot in my vault, cozying up to my Uberti 5.5" replica.

I'm still looking for an in-my-price-range shootable '49, but this beauty has definitely won me over.

View attachment 295121
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View attachment 295124
What a treasure you found. If it were mine I also would have to shoot it a time or two just to see how an original compares with a reproduction but wouldn't want to stress the ole girl any more than was necessary to find out. So few of these in good shooting order are left for posterity in this day and age.
 
I have 4 1862 Pocket Pistols, 2 Police and 2 Navy. 1 Navy and `1 Police, both 2nd gens, have been given the Goon Treatment and Jackrabbit Job. They are a hoot to shoot!
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I just fit a new cylinder in my 62 police ............. an early Dixie gun made my Uberti.
They impress me as little guns that act a lot like 51s when shooting them.
 
I had the opportunity to run a few round balls through the ol' gal today... just a single cylinder of low-powered shots, however.

Function was perfect, and accuracy was surprisingly good given the pimple-sized front sight and barely-there rear sight/notch in the hammer. Kept all the balls in a 5" group from 25', and even managed to get two in the "paint," firing more-or-less to point of aim.

For a 161-year-old all-original relic, it proved to be accurate, reliable, and an absolute hoot to shoot.

Next time, it'll be a few more than a handful of shots, and in the national forest where I'll have space to ring steel plates.
 
It's funny how people's taste can differ so much. I can't stomach the body lines of those. Evertime I see one it reminds me of this
aardvark-tongue-out_4x3.jpg
 
Tip;
Have you measured the cylinder bores,
my original 1860 Colt needs .380 dia balls to produce tight groups.
 

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