There's never been an end to the stories and lies about the Whitneyville-Walker revolvers. I use the term because Colt didn't make them, but subcontracted them out to Eli Whitney. It's only recently that someone seems to have realized there were only 1,000 made per the contract plus an additional 100 ordered by Colt for gifts, etc. All the stories about the second 1,000 for Walker and Hays Texas Rangers is hog wash. There were no second 1,000; they were designed for issue to Walker's regiment "The Regiment of Mounted Riflemen"...later 3rd Dragoons; 200 went to the bottom of the Mississippi in a barge sinking and Jack Hays regiment "The First Volunteer Mounted Regiment of Texas only got 180 issued to them through Walker's good graces and after he was dead...so says the regimental adjutant John Salmon
'RIP' Ford, who kept meticulous records. Of these, 90 odd were "lost in service"...read: some went boom, some went to Texas in saddle bags and 90 odd went back to armory inventory.
Ole RIP felt the explosive failures were due to troopers being unfamiliar with the conical slugs cast in the molds and were loading them backwards in the cylinders...I maintain ole Eli Whitney was saving pocket change by substituting iron for steel, a trick he got caught doing at other times. Whatever, the guns have had a more checkered past than just about anything made in the U.S. One thing RIP did mention, one of the 'rangers'...OK I"ll call them that since they did themselves, managed to plug a Mexican guerilla at 120 paces...no idea who's paces were used to measure it though! :wink: :haha: