Also the guns may have been photo props
Exactly so they were "Horse" pistols carried in pommel holsters on the saddlemActually the first "Belt" pistol was the .36 1851 Navy Colt.There's a good reason they were referred to (along with earlier single-shot handguns) as "horse pistols"
The Paterson models preceded the Navy by two decades. I'm sure it wasn't the first handgun to be carried on the belt. This .54 is a dainty 28oz.Exactly so they were "Horse" pistols carried in pommel holsters on the saddlemActually the first "Belt" pistol was the .36 1851 Navy Colt.
Other than the uniqueness and history I really fail to se the fascination about the 1847 Colt Walker. I had one, shot it a couple of times and traded it off. A pair of 1860 .44 Army Colts does the job very nicely/
To each his own I guess
Respectfully
Bumk
I myself have a dragoon repro that I put in a Californian type holster on a 3" wide belt. The belt seems to work relatively comfortably but I have no need to carry it around for any length of time and I have some doubt whether such a wide belt would have been used (or at least commonly used) back in the day, not having myself seen any historical photos documenting a very wide belt with cap and ball revolver(s).
Rip Ford is not impressed with most of y'all.
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There was an everyday attitude in those days to "make do" with what you had and if it was all you can get, use it anyway. That form of thinking is not as prevalent today I imagine.
That photo was from about 1858 during his rangering days, so there were definitely lighter options available. He probably liked the bigger guns because they were better for shooting the horse out from under a Comanche or something like that. That said, those are clearly belt holsters (not pommel holsters!) and made for maybe a Walker and a dragoon. And the belt is pretty small looking, but maybe the rest is wider or the buckskins spread out the weight enough to be not painful.
For a bit more of the historical perspective, I found Randolph Marcy's passages in The Prairie Traveler interesting (published in 1859 as a guide for overland emigrants). He was a career frontier army officer and discusses the relative merits of the Colt's "navy" and "army" size revolvers - in the latter case he must be referring to a dragoon, since there's reference to the length of time which the army had used both types of revolver and the guide's pre-1860 publication.
He indicates his personal preference for the "army sized" revolver, despite its bulk, and, also writes, "many of our experienced frontier officers prefer carrying their pistols in a belt at their sides to placing them in holsters attached to the saddle, as in the former case they are always at hand when they are dismounted; whereas, by the other plan, they become useless when a man is unhorsed...."
A lot of the famous Gettysburg pics were staged, the "Sharphooter at Devils Den" was just some poor random dead Condeferate he dragged in there with a 61 Springfield leaned up on a rockback in the day a photograph was a really big deal. Not an every day thing like today. they absolutly dressed up in their best clothes and posed. very few if any candid shots of that era... it was even quite common to pose battlefield photos. . they did not have the ethics figured out because the technology was too new. In the height of modern photojournalism , WW11 through 2016ish you would get kicked out of the business for posing or altering a news image.
I hope alot of people take your advice.Don't get too full of yourself for packing heat in public. Here in New England we are not afraid to go to the grocery store without suiting up like a dumpster dumpling wall mart tactical commando wannabee.... when I need to carry no one ever knows.... walk softly, be professional, be polite and have a plan that no one needs to know about...
All goes well until you make her mad and she lays that purse up along the side of yourHave your woman carry it in her purse that way it is ready when you need it but it is not a burden to you. Lol.
It would take a week to find it in the boss ladies purse with all the other stuff in there.All goes well until you make her mad and she lays that purse up along the side of your
Head
In regards to your Walker experience, Friend of mine had one and several other friends want them. Purely the desire to have a powerful hand cannon. It doesn't help that the character Gus in the mini series Lonesome Dove was waving it around all the time. I think one person I know that has a .44 mag Ruger super blackhawk may be compensating somehow. Everyone that has gone shooting with him will not risk doing so again.Exactly so they were "Horse" pistols carried in pommel holsters on the saddlemActually the first "Belt" pistol was the .36 1851 Navy Colt.
Other than the uniqueness and history I really fail to se the fascination about the 1847 Colt Walker. I had one, shot it a couple of times and traded it off. A pair of 1860 .44 Army Colts does the job very nicely/
To each his own I guess
Respectfully
Bumk
That's an odd perspective. I've been shooting and carrying .44Mag's since I was 16. That has since grown all the way to .500's. Never thought my manhood was a contributing factor.In regards to your Walker experience, Friend of mine had one and several other friends want them. Purely the desire to have a powerful hand cannon. It doesn't help that the character Gus in the mini series Lonesome Dove was waving it around all the time. I think one person I know that has a .44 mag Ruger super blackhawk may be compensating somehow. Men that carry those around are more often than not truly dangerous. Everyone that has gone shooting with him will not risk doing so again.
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