A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty. A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty.

A Superb & Most Rare 'New York City' Manufactured 1851 Colt Navy Revolver, British Royal Naval Contract Pistol For The British War Department's Supply of Arms For The Crimean War in Russia. In Stunning Condition, & A Rare Beauty.

With matching serial numbers, for 1853, and very good patinated colour and finish overall, with clear and crisp stampings, and good tight action. A truly super and most rarely surviving, original, US manufactured, 1851 Colt Navy ‘British War Department Contract’ marked and stamped pistol. With fine roll engraved cylinder depicting the sailing ship sea battle. Nicely coloured varnished grips.
With the advent of the Crimean War and the sudden need for handguns in the field, the British Ordnance Department placed orders for a total of 23,700 Colt’s “Navy” pistols. The .36 calibre revolver was a departure from British military handgun doctrine in many ways, as it was both a smaller calibre (.36) when compared to the traditional British military pistols that were typically between .58 and .65 calibre, and it was a multi-shot weapon. The general acceptance of modern repeating handguns was still very much up in the air with the British military at that time, but they proceeded with the order anyway. These revolvers were delivered between March of 1854 and February of 1856. While most of these guns were delivered from Colt’s London production facility, additional revolvers were delivered, out of urgency, from his US based Hartford {New York} manufactory as well. Of all the revolvers supplied, 9,600 were issued to the Royal Navy, and 5,000 were issued to the army in the Crimea, such as to the ‘Guards’ regiment officers.

The majority of the British purchased military guns were standard London production Colt Model 1851 Revolvers. These guns featured iron backstraps, large iron rounded triggerguards, the standard Colt London address, small “severe” London style serial numbers, rounded head frame screws and “Slim Jim” grips. Some American-made revolvers were delivered to complete the order, with the usual brass backstraps and triggerguards. This example is one of those few very rare American made examples.
Eventually nearly all of the British military acquired Colt Navy revolvers were marked with the usual London Address, the London proof marks, as well as the government ownership mark of a small {Broad Arrow} and WD (War Department) mark. However, as to the acquisition of the few American manufactured revolvers, and the speed with which the revolvers were issued, some of the American revolvers went into the field during the Crimean War without the added British proof markings {just as this one doesn't possess} but, with just the War Department WD and Broad Arrow, just as this revolver does indeed have.

Period accounts indicate that the Royal Navy found the revolvers very popular and useful, particularly for boarding parties. In fact, after the conclusion of the Crimean conflict, the Royal Navy continued to utilize the Colt revolvers {alongside the 1839 Pattern Sea Service Single Shot Pistol} in Chinese waters during the Second Opium War that broke out in the fall of 1856. Such as aboard HMS Tribune, which brought the Royal Marines to English Camp, and was a participant in the battle of Guangzhou, during which it had successfully destroyed a fleet of Chinese warships in the Pearl River Delta. Members of the Royal Marines had seen combat across China during the Second Opium War, including fighting in sieges of Chinese forts and naval battles also using the WD Colt revolvers.

The Second Opium War, which brought English Camp's Royal Marines to Guangzhou, started after the Chinese seized a suspected pirate ship that was registered as a British merchant vessel. In retaliation, Britain began destroying Chinese forts and eventually gathered an international force that would include British, French, and American combatants. This war would last for four years and climaxed with the burning and looting of the Summer Palace in Beijing, shortly after the Royal Marines arrived at English Camp.

Interestingly, Colt’s 1851 Navy revolver, their 1860 Army Model and the 1861 Navy Model, all sport cylinder scenes of a naval conflict. If you look closely at the cylinders, you’ll find the legend “Engaged 16 May 1843,” along with the flags of the young Texas Republic and the early Mexican colours flying from the ships’ masts. This date, along with the nautical imagery, represents a seaborne battle in which Texas’s Commodore Edwin Ward Moore defeated a superior (in both number of ships and their size) fleet of Mexican warships—a crucial event in Texas’s struggle for independence. This naval scene was another shrewd move on the part of Colonel Sam Colt, since he was purposely catering to the Texas market that had been so prosperous for him in the past.

The Crimean War was the first major European conflict since Samuel Colt’s revolvers took the world by storm at the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations in 1851, the first World’s Fair. Colt debuted his new revolvers in a large display at the fair, including the Model 1851 Navy which was known originally as Colt’s Belt Model. This was to be Colt’s most significant revolver on the international market.

The Observer of London on November 23, 1851, under the heading “Colt’s Revolvers” noted, “No weapon has attracted more attention than the American revolvers of which several specimens were exhibited during the recent Exhibition…” They stated that U.S. Ordnance tests that showed the ‘51 Navy could be fired 1,500 times a day with only one cleaning. It also reported that they had been used in the Mexican-American War, referencing Colt’s earlier Paterson revolvers, and that the British government had approved the Colt for officers in Africa and India and that this sanctioning had, “not only served to clear the shelves and counters of the American department of the Exhibition, but has been the means of obtaining a large number of orders to be executed for persons in this country.”

Other historic 1851 Navy Colt revolvers used by figures involved in the Crimean War, include Emperor Napoleon III, and a cased pair owned by Lord Cardigan, British Commander of the Light Brigade,

A photo in the gallery of HMS Warrior, and Iron-Clad warship, with the rack of WD 1851 Navy Colts aboard.
HMS Warrior is a 40-gun steam-powered armoured frigate built for the Royal Navy in 1859–1861. She was the name ship of the Warrior-class ironclads. Warrior and her sister ship HMS Black Prince were the first armour-plated, iron-hulled warships, and were built in response to France's launching in 1859 of the first ocean-going ironclad warship, the wooden-hulled Gloire. She is now in HM Dockyards

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