Mexican Flintlock Pistol

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Randy Sutton

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I have a Spanish flintlock pistol that is a copy of a 1786 French Marine pistol that is defiantly not French. It has the remnants of a gold cartos in the barrel and the hammer and tumbler assembly is quite different. It is marked with a Eagle and Snake and a R.C on the lock. It has regimental markings branded in the wrist of the stock. (2R 5C 30) Would the regimental markings be Spanish or Mexican and do they represent any regiment of historical significance?
 
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French troops in Mexico, they were there for a while?
From the late 1820s onward there was French immigration to Mexico including two French colonies in the State of Veracruz. In 1861 French troops invaded Mexico with the support of Mexican conservatives and set up Maximilian as the Emperor of Mexico until 1867 when the French troops were withdrawn.
 
From the late 1820s onward there was French immigration to Mexico including two French colonies in the State of Veracruz. In 1861 French troops invaded Mexico with the support of Mexican conservatives and set up Maximilian as the Emperor of Mexico until 1867 when the French troops were withdrawn.
This is not a French Pistol. It is a Spanish copy of a French pistol.
 
I have a Spanish flintlock pistol that is a copy of a 1786 French Marine pistol that is defiantly not French. It has the remnants of a gold cartos in the barrel and the hammer and tumbler assembly is quite different. It is marked with a Eagle and Snake and a R.C on the lock. It has regimental markings branded in the wrist of the stock. (2R 5C 30) Would the regimental markings be Spanish or Mexican and do they represent any regiment of historical significance?
 

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This is not a French Pistol. It is a Spanish copy of a French pistol.
The internal workings of the pistol are not French. The makers name is in a cartouche. The hammer is attached by a pin that looks like screw as opposed to being attached to the tumbler. The barrel has a Spanish cartouche that still has some remanences of gold. It is a Spanish copy of a 1786 French pistol.
 
With the eagle biting the snake stamp, it was Mexican military, so the regimental stamps should be Mexican also. Any old Spanish military marks may have been filed or ground off. Nice bit of history there. Maybe it was at the Alamo or Goliad!
 

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