Well, if you want to disregard a decade of rendezvous ....
No, I understand the trade continued well up to about 1870. But for ronny purposes, I am with others who disdain the sight of Colt revolvers and other 'modern' devices.
Well, if you want to disregard a decade of rendezvous ....
Rifleman1776 said:Well, if you want to disregard a decade of rendezvous ....
No, I understand the trade continued well up to about 1870. But for ronny purposes, I am with others who disdain the sight of Colt revolvers and other 'modern' devices.
tenngun said:Kit Carson owened a colt in 1839. Off hand I don't recall when Carson left the trade. Bridger sponcered the last rendezvous in 1843. It lost money. So I wonder since there wasn't a 41,42 vous, was this the first rendezvous reinactment?
/tenngun said:Kit Carson owened a colt in 1839. Off hand I don't recall when Carson left the trade. Bridger sponcered the last rendezvous in 1843. It lost money. So I wonder since there wasn't a 41,42 vous, was this the first rendezvous reinactment? Ol' Jim owned a Hawken rifle at this time. I wonder if any one told him real Mountian men carried plane Pennsylvania rifles and the Hawken belonged to the plains, Oragan trail, gold rush era.
cgn71 said:tengun, after a few years of being here and reading over the years I'm almost convinced now the percussion gun didn't exist until the 1950s when Navy Arms helped start the modern reproduction era. They made percussion guns just for those of us to stupid or scared to shoot a flintlock.
And well for the Hawken, I've also been convinced the Hawken brothers were only able to turn out 3 or 4 in their whole lives... :surrender:
You can bet there were flints in California in the 1850s
Enter your email address to join: