1913 made Colt MODEL OF 1911 U.S. ARMY

CLASSIC12

Member
Joined
Mar 25, 2010
Messages
1,699
Reaction score
11,373
Location
Switzerland
I bought this finishless 1913 Colt 1911 last month. Despite being in the white, the metal was in very good condition, the markings still deep and crisp, no soft edges were apparent and the grips were in good condition for 100 years old wood.

I had decided to have it professionally re-blued. Not an easy decision for such an old gun, but I felt that the originality and serious collectibility was gone once some previous owner had totally removed the finish; I guess there was some corrosion, although there is no apparent deep pitting, and someone decided to refinish it rather than just treat the areas affected, but did not finish the job (pun intended).

(Minimal) prepping was $ 90 and blueing was $ 220

Anyway it came back for the shop and here it is

Before

ddcc372feac70f1e1ac6569f0e98c0eb.jpg


31ede8426f4be24337d742a1a7a939ff.jpg



After

83af978d2f700b1085091c706b91a49b.jpg


005673c59eb145d0508bcc7567b2c679.jpg


bc618e3d3b31311a15f9293dc606a064.jpg


b015a2395476156260537652067238c0.jpg


4cda0817ad4977e4b773adccb8e9fad2.jpg


bac6aa33c497c791558254a5b9e199fd.jpg


4afa108464c05429bd5c80d1611f1f4b.jpg


ea7ebab1c681fef6a7e841e12fc367cb.jpg


6d94e724d368b82df9d53b5c3aa127ec.jpg


bd2d282cf7fd9b2d27a5e0c3cfea007d.jpg

894b52fd6944d5aee25320dba164429f.jpg


5f4386875d029dbd52214cb984f81ad0.jpg


6ca1ceb2491fe68dc5926f7b53540fed.jpg


70cce746842e306c4f40753935d09bba.jpg


3d0dd3d9ca1607d1df52fc7fd0fd742f.jpg


ed305318934a0dbe20c510820a678df9.jpg


0ddd1530e30c1c6a366c420c0519c8b0.jpg


With its 1943 descendant

b1d3342d3509451f4f955762a0d244b8.jpg


ce9dfd0bd0f39874da9b954eeeca6d96.jpg


I am happy with the result. Whilst not an original 1913, it’s still a pretty and eye pleasing gun to me and a testimonial to a glorious design that lasted and stayed relevant for so long.

I won’t shoot it, as I also stopped shooting the A1 after abt 50 rounds, couldn’t resist.
 
Register to hide this ad
Outstanding.

While others might disagree, particularly on this site, about ever refinishing ANY original condition collectable firearms, I think you did the exact thing I would have done. I think you did more of a restoration than a refinishing, even though the current finish might not be 100% historical.

That's a 1911 I'd certainly be proud to own.

Thanks for sharing it.

P. S. C'mon, you HAVE to shoot it. How can you not? :)
 
Last edited:
Just curious, is this what that gun would have looked like when it shipped?


I am not a specialist in the old 1911 field but I did try to find as many pictures of this particular year and model to have a good idea of how it should look

The one you pictured seems to be a commercial pistol (« C » prefix, no USP markings, VP on the trigger guard, pony in a circle) with a high level of polishing and very blue small parts. I guess it was restored too.

Here are two pictures I found of a very well preserved original

b78041ea899799f2a2271486a4d47c95.jpg


6005aee22dbc9cc04e34df9824dae654.jpg


And here is a Turnbull restoration

d7f59a4e3ba45fc5de5ce73669ea2a59.plist


e7efe31979191f09cfe4d2822038f1bb.plist
 
Last edited:
Classic12–one of the more interesting things to me since becoming a member of this forum are the “mystery” guns posted like yours in various stages what I would call “remodeling” or restoration. I can certainly understand wanting to refinish a firearm but leaving it in the white surprises me. I guess folks get drawn off onto other projects or simply lose interest. I also strongly suspect in many of these instances, they planned on doing the work themselves and it never gets done.

I think your finished product is outstanding. I gather from your post that you had the work done locally, but that may be assuming too much? I also assume with the strong firearm culture you have there that there are a number of top craftsman and gunsmiths that refinish and restore firearms.
 
Classic12–one of the more interesting things to me since becoming a member of this forum are the “mystery” guns posted like yours in various stages what I would call “remodeling” or restoration. I can certainly understand wanting to refinish a firearm but leaving it in the white surprises me. I guess folks get drawn off onto other projects or simply lose interest. I also strongly suspect in many of these instances, they planned on doing the work themselves and it never gets done.

I think your finished product is outstanding. I gather from your post that you had the work done locally, but that may be assuming too much? I also assume with the strong firearm culture you have there that there are a number of top craftsman and gunsmiths that refinish and restore firearms.


Thank you. I am quite conscious of some firearms history and very respectful of original and rare / old guns, so it is a very rare occurrence for me to consider a restoration or any permanent modifications. In this case I also wanted this pistol to possibly endure and survive the next 100 years, and white carbon steel is just too prone to rusting. Also it didn’t look right to me as an unfinished job as you stated.

The Sig P 210-2 milsurp I had hard chromed is a common gun here in Switzerland, 130’000 were made for the army (which is substantial for a small country of 8 million inhabitants) plus I think another 50’000 civilian ones. It was cheap, not in very good condition and the barrel, sights and grips were non-original so I didn’t feel bad about the restoration / modification.

A different SIG P210
 
Last edited:
Come on now , you're going to tell us you didn't at least shoot it before you sent it off ? I can see not shooting it now , that's your decision . But I would at least shot it before sending it off .
 
I'd shoot it, just to verify it still works. Which I'm sure that it would.

Very nice, Congratulations.



Considering that it came to you 'in the white', I think that you did the right thing. It looks quite nice to me and I would be pleased to own it.
Good decision and nice work. Take it out and shoot it. I'm sure you will enjoy it.



Outstanding.



While others might disagree, particularly on this site, about ever refinishing ANY original condition collectable firearms, I think you did the exact thing I would have done. I think you did more of a restoration than a refinishing, even though the current finish might not be 100% historical.



That's a 1911 I'd certainly be proud to own.



Thanks for sharing it.



P. S. C'mon, you HAVE to shoot it. How can you not? :)



Looks great! I'd shoot it, just too much fun not to.



I would have to shoot it! Nice job.



Looks great!



I think your reasoning for having it refinished is sound, and I would likely have done the same.



And I would shoot it, too. At least a few magazines-worth.



Looks great, but don’t be afraid to shoot it, it’s a refinished gun after all.



That gun looks great.
If the gun could speak, it would tell you: shoot me.



Come on now , you're going to tell us you didn't at least shoot it before you sent it off ? I can see not shooting it now , that's your decision . But I would at least shot it before sending it off .



I am not worried about the new finish, in fact it could use a little honest wear. I’m rather worried about cracking the non hardened slide or breaking some other 107 years old part.

And beyond the feel good factor of shooting a 107 yrs old army pistol, the trigger is surprisingly heavy and horrible, the sights are minuscule and I am not sure the experience would be that rewarding. And that’s from a guy who likes to shoot all his guns.
 
Last edited:
. . . the sights are minuscule and I am not sure the experience would be that rewarding. And that’s from a guy who likes to shoot all his guns.

Classic12–I have been too busy to follow-up, the past couple of days, but I wanted to mention all the 1911’s I have shot—Springfield TRP and Gold Cup had better sights than a plain Jane government model. I noticed the abysmal sights of the what became the government model—the ORIGINAL 1911 in the Browning Museum. When we were there the curator was wiping the displays down and I got to hold it in white cotton cloves.

My feeling has always been they were designed to be a last-ditch/ big-bore/combat/across the trench belly gun—sort of a trench or room cleaner. A point a shoot gun. Easy to use from horseback too. I think all the close-tolerance accuracy concerns came much later.
 

Attachments

  • B00EEBE3-6331-4C4A-B1D8-51E6B8B8D080.jpg
    B00EEBE3-6331-4C4A-B1D8-51E6B8B8D080.jpg
    56.3 KB · Views: 14
Back
Top