Civil War Gun, With Bullets Still in it!

coinman123

Silver Member
Feb 21, 2013
4,659
5,768
New England, Somewhere Metal Detecting in the Wood
🥇 Banner finds
2
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
Teknetics T2 SE (DST)
Spare Teknetics T2 SE (backup)
15" T2 coil
Pro-Pointer
Bounty Hunter Pioneer 202
Fisher F2
Fisher F-Point
Primary Interest:
Other
Remington .44 Army Model 1858 Percussion Revolver, Still Loaded!

My Grandfather dredged this revolver out of Chesapeake Bay in the 1980's. He identified it as a Remington 1858 Army. It was given to me a few years ago, and I put it away not thinking much of it. When I was taking documents out of the attic a saw this revolver, and took great interest in it. I did research based on what my grandfather put on the back of the mount (He used square nails from a 1700's farmhouse to make the mount). The small mount had a cut-out photo of how the gun would look new, the model, and where/how, it was found. A few of the .44 bullets are still in the revolver. This model of percussion revolver that was made from, 1861 through 1875, and was used in the civil war (Where the Civil War was fought), and in the Indian Wars (In the west). There is no solid evidence that proves it was used in the Civil War (Serial Numbers are corroded), but it is very likely that it was used in the Civil War.

Remington Model 1858 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

IMG_20140308_195831.jpg IMG_20140308_195857.jpg IMG_20140308_195910.jpg IMG_20140308_195817.jpg

Thanks for Looking,
 

Last edited:
Upvote 15
OP
OP
coinman123

coinman123

Silver Member
Feb 21, 2013
4,659
5,768
New England, Somewhere Metal Detecting in the Wood
🥇 Banner finds
2
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
Teknetics T2 SE (DST)
Spare Teknetics T2 SE (backup)
15" T2 coil
Pro-Pointer
Bounty Hunter Pioneer 202
Fisher F2
Fisher F-Point
Primary Interest:
Other
I have a saddle that was from the same era....that doesn't make it a Civil War Saddle...

Why make a claim that has no providence?

I revised my original thread, saying that there there is no proof that it was used in the Civil War, but there is good chance it could have. I will try to change the name to, "Remington .44 Army Model 1858 Percussion Revolver"
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top