Early Engraved 44 Magnum

Doc44

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This 44 Magnum was Class B engraved by Virginia Le Blanc (VL inscribed on the grip frame) and shipped in June 1956. It is the earliest factory engraved 44 Magnum reported to date. The stocks are by Alvin White and are made of birds eye maple. Click on the photos for a better look.

Bill

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Another beauty, Doc. Congratulations, again.
Steve
 
Those grips are crazy cool! It looks like a stylized fish mouth with the emblem for a eye. If the engraving is factory, it would seem that the grips had to be commissioned at the same time and that the engraving followed the lines laded out by the grips.
Outstanding. I hope you can find the backstory of who this was built for.
 
The stocks were most likely made before the 44 Magnum. I put them on the 44 because the revolver's engraving was patterned for Magna stocks and the stocks by Mr. White fill the bill. I purchased the stocks separately many years ago. They are the only set I have seen that are made of birds eye maple.

The revolver was shipped to a distributor and probably sold as stock item by them. The revolver was lettered by an Army Major in the mid-70s, but I doubt he was the first owner.

Bill
 
44 In formal attire

This 44 Magnum was Class B engraved by Virginia Le Blanc (VL inscribed on the grip frame) and shipped in June 1956. It is the earliest factory engraved 44 Magnum reported to date. The stocks are by Alvin White and are made of birds eye maple. Click on the photos for a better look.

Bill

orig.jpg


orig.jpg

If I was fortunate enough to own such a masterpiece it would be for looking at not shooting. Far too nice for that.
 
Bill
Let me get this straight. The stocks don't number to the gun. You put the set together. Your collecting Parts Guns now? It appears your collection is going downhill.
 
The stocks were most likely made before the 44 Magnum. I put them on the 44 because the revolver's engraving was patterned for Magna stocks and the stocks by Mr. White fill the bill. I purchased the stocks separately many years ago. They are the only set I have seen that are made of birds eye maple.

The revolver was shipped to a distributor and probably sold as stock item by them. The revolver was lettered by an Army Major in the mid-70s, but I doubt he was the first owner.

Bill

You had me fooled! I would have thought they where born together for sure.
 
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