rednichols
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I don’t know when the practice started, but a U.S.Army Ordnance Memoranda No. 22 relating to the use and manufacture of U.S. small arms and printed in 1878 addressed the Colt revolver and stated as follows:
“ To load the revolver - hold the revolver in the left hand, muzzle downward. Half cock it with the right hand and open the gate. Insert the cartridges with the right hand. Close the gate and bring the hammer to the safety notch. Keep it there until the revolver is to be fired.”
So, official Army doctrine at that time, five years after adoption of the Colt revolver, decreed it be fully loaded. I assume some individuals started carrying five earlier than this but the Army did not. I will research further to see if and when the recommendation changed.
A very well thought out reply from wyo, no speculation, just facts.
An additional answer, is that it seems it never became "common practice". Bear with me if that seems nonsensical.
It was Ruger who was left to bear the brunt of loading six in the Colt. You see, Ruger's copy of the SAA, which was the original Blackhawk with red medallions, carried no advice against the practice, and in the early '70s one of them fell from its holster and shot its owner. Ruger lost that case and every one thereafter. This led to the transfer bar ignition system borrowed from the Iver Johnson, including a retrofit kit.
That meant modern SAs really could carry 6 rounds. Colt did something or other to deal with the problem, never bothered to determine what exactly.
John Bianchi knew an opportunity when he saw one, and Ruger launched a safety programme centered around the Ruger Practical holster, today a collectible. I created it for them under John's instructions of course.
The holster indeed was a flap holster, and ads for it emphasised the '5 beans in the cylinder' from John's extensive knowledge of the old west. Yet, ironically, it was the Ruger that raised industry awareness and led to warnings in their literature. Yet suddenly 6 rounds was completely safe if it was a Ruger.
At Bianchi we had plenty of lawsuits relating to accidental discharges in holsters, some of which involved Colt. Colt settled in one case, we persisted and won exoneration. Let me tell you that witness stand was no fun.
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