Your First S&W

Nine years ago last month, I sold my Ruger Blackhawk .45 Convertible to fund what would be my first S&W - a new 625MG in my favorite .45 Colt caliber. Having drooled over that gun for most of the preceding year, I was shocked when I went to the pusher's - moola in hand - and found it gone - sold! Saddened, I returned home - and secured a condo at Gulf Shores for the week after Labor Day (... rates drop... no kids...) with my gun money. My wife had plenty of spending booty for collectibles and souvenirs - and shopped freely that first day. The first night, she asked for a blanket from the condo's closet shelf. I grabbed same - pulled - and got hit in the head with a blue plastic box - which I caught. It had 'my' new 625-7 MG in .45 Colt (Top, below)... she was the one who had bought it!

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Before September was over, I had a new 4" 625-8 in .45 ACP - with the little wart above the cylinder release. Next was a 4" 629MG - then some reloading equipment. The flood gates opened - I eventually found a LN 625-6 MG in .45 Colt (Bottom, above) to take some of the wear from my sentimental favorite first S&W.

Stainz
 
Mine first s&w was a blued model 36 with a 2 inch barrel made in 1972 unfortunately i was forced to sell it recently to help my family pay for a new refrigerator.
 
This is my favorite forum online, and has been since before I joined, and this might be the best thread on it! It's taken the better part of the past week to read every single post on all 18 (so far) pages in this thread! When I first started reading them I decided I wouldn't post until i finished reading them all. I'm subscribed and look forward to reading about more first smiths :)

My first delve into gun ownership was all black powder for a while. I collected cap n ball guns and shot the heck out of 'em for three or four years, until one day an older family-friend decided to 'hand me down' his 5906, which happened to be his first pistol as well. He had only put a box or two of ammo through it in his days! I can't say the same, I've put at least 2000 rounds through it since then, and it shoots now like it shot the first time I pulled the trigger, if not better. In all those rounds I can recall maybe three FTFs, none in the past year, all stovepipes and probably the round or mag's fault. That S&W was my first "cartridge-firing" firearm of any sort, though i had much rim and center-fire shooting experience prior to ownership. I'll pass on that 5906 to the right younger-person some day, family, friend, or both, whenever the time comes that feels right. No way is it leaving my possession any other way!

So that 5906 was a gift. My first S&W purchase was my second S&W. Once upon a time I fiiiiinally got the 'Good News' call from the Detective who handles licensing in my town. I knew it was just a matter of waiting to receive my concealed-carry permit in the mail, so this was a very good reason to celebrate! I went out to search for the 1911 I'd wanted since I was about 12 years old. I live in MA, so in order to purchase a new firearm, it must be on an evil restricted list of "MA approved firearms." I wanted a NIB 1911, so Colt, Springfield and Kimber were out of the question. I already loved my 5906 dearly, and had shot several smiths at this point and had much respect for their quality, so I knew when I left the house that I was looking for a SW1911. What I didn't know was that there was going to be the SW1911 better than I could have ever expected and hoped for waiting for me at the first shop I visited! The major things that had bothered me about SW1911s were the HUGE letters often found down the slide, and the extra serrations up front. When I entered the gun shop I walked right up to 1911 case that I've drooled over in the past, and my jaw hit the floor. Waiting for me was the beauty seen in my photos below. Ltd edition, one of 231!!! I had it all paid for by the day my License came in the mail, and I took it home that very same day of course! I even got it NIB for $200 less than the standard SW1911s next to it cost.... i still can't believe that. I've carried it just about every day since then with very few exceptions, and it shoots better than I can describe. I don't really believe in fate, but that gun waiting for me kinda felt like that. Both these smiths I've written about I would never ever sell or trade, even if I become penniless and homeless.

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I bought my first Smith & Wesson in 1993. It is a 629-2 I think. Bought it brand new. I gave it to my 14 year old Son last year when I replaced it with the latest S&W I purchased, a 329PD. The 329PD is a lot easier to pack in the mountains than that 629!

WC
 

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I just bought my first one, an M&P 40c, about a month ago. A couple weeks later I bought my second one, an M&P 40 full size with S&W night sights.

Seeing all the photos of revolvers is making me droll a bit guys. Now I think I'll have to save up for a 629 or 686.
 
1966 -- Mod 36 with the square butt -- paid $60 -- I used it as my back-up gun for many years -- Gave it to another officer in a trade in 75-76 as I remember
 
A model 10 M&P from a "civilian" in RVN, 1969. Passed it on to another GI fdor $60.00, the way I had gotten it-like new, with a cross draw holster, and quite a bit of ammo. Don't know the dash number, but is was a 4 inch pencil, and the bluing was incredible. I hope it stayed in "good hands," and that it's still out there glistening. Flapjack
 
My first was a LNIB (possibly unfired) 15-3 bought about a year ago for 400 bucks.

I now have over 200 Smith & Wesson revolvers.

Okay, 10.
 
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I bought my first Smith & Wesson in 1993. It is a 629-2 I think. Bought it brand new. I gave it to my 14 year old Son last year when I replaced it with the latest S&W I purchased, a 329PD. The 329PD is a lot easier to pack in the mountains than that 629!

WC

Check out the placement of Jr.'s index finger in post #184. Nice goin, Dad! FUN-DA-MENTALS
 
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Why would anyone ever buy a Smith and Wesson when similar Taurus revolvers were $100 less and Ruger revolvers were $50 less. Did I ever have a surprise coming when I picked up a S&W Model 14-3 for $175 OTD. Haven't bought anything but S&W since. ($175.00 - Yes, that was 20 years ago.)
 
Learned to shoot with my first handgun, a M-29, 4" nickel. I really wanted a 6.5" blue but all I could find was a 4". Purchased it for $221 in 1974. M-29's were hard to find back then and I had to settle on what ever was available.
 
My first S&W was/is a 28-2 , 6 inch. I was told it was carried by a police Chaplin in Amarillo, TX . Spot on. Breaks just like glass. A working gun with wear, classic S&W.
 
Actually, I bought two at the same time in 1970. A 6" model 28 and a model 35. The model 28 I bought new at Montgomery Ward in Oakland California and the model 35, also new, I bought at Siegel's, in Oakland. I still have the model 35 but lost the Highway Patrolman in a trade many years ago. I finally replaced the model 28 a few years back. A very large number of Smith & Wesson handguns have passed through my hands since then, I prefer to believe that I kept the majority of the best ones.

Steve
 
Model 442, no lock, that I bought when I finally decided to get my VA concealed handgun permit two years ago. It pretty much goes wherever I go. A more resilient, handy, and impressive handgun is difficult to imagine.
 

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My first Smith & Wesson was a Model 39 which I bought new in the early '70s. At the time, it was the issued sidearm of the Illinois State Police.
 
The first S&W I ever bought was a model 10 with a 4 inch pencil barrel purchased late '74 or early '75 and she's still with me. We got a lot of miles together and she still makes frequent trips to the range with me though not much carried anymore.
 
My first S&W was a nickel model 27-2 with a 6" barrel, that I got in a trade for a Colt Trooper. That was back in 1978. Back then I was an absolute Colt fanatic, who believed no other gun could rival a Colt Python. Fortunately the advent of the internet confirmed what I had learned through personal experience, the Python action, while super smooth, was prone to timing problems. Once Colt decided to stop producing revolvers, I quickly reasoned that with no factory trained gunsmiths out there to work on my Python's, finding someone qualified to correct the timing issues was going to be tough. So out with the Colt's and in with the S&W's. Glad I made the switch.
 
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