Colt London Agency SAA .450 Boxer From 1875

lestert357

US Veteran
Joined
Apr 30, 2014
Messages
1,675
Reaction score
12,250
Location
Old Dominion
Before I turned my attention to S&W Pre-War and early postwar .357 Magnums in 2014 I had spent the previous 25 years dabbling in 1st generation Colt Single Actions. It undoubtedly had something to do with growing up watching 1950's era TV westerns. I had some really nice SAA's during those 25 years, many of which I wish I still had. However one I managed to hang onto is a very early gun, and the nicest black powder SAA I ever owned. S&W .357 Magnums notwithstanding, this London Agency Colt SAA .450 Boxer from 1875 remains the centerpiece of my collection…..
bf167f73a4d92724392b8a0654929a19.jpg

d541de1f993584ac60ed0ff1578fb341.jpg

85a0b6b7842a24e31f054479f27d1a44.jpg


I did not realize it at the time I bought the gun at the 2014 Baltimore Antique Gun Show, but later discovered that it is pictured on page 54 of Don Wilkerson's book "The Official Record of the Colt Single Action Army Revolver 1873 - 1895"…..
430f98e40d319816af584eb98701cfc7.jpg


I also subsequently discovered the auction listing and excellent pictures of the gun in the Spring 2014 Morphy's Auction…..
f920977bd7d1533eaa8ff4ef96ab9f69.png

d9f7b5b76dd72ada80c5ed2e1a5ae9c9.png

e90358203b64141a4abf87a8dd500013.png

5b4845af92c1eb3acceaffd12d8a099c.png

f96ac8ad8504400a03b38b77c7f026fd.png

f93787eff571c4c50fe9c5381620b24d.png

Photo Credits - Morphy Auctions

My on-going project with this gun is to replace the smokeless powder Kynoch .450 Revolver cartridges with original 1870's vintage black powder .450 Boxer 2-piece case cartridges, and also to add an original blued cleaning rod to the package. That will continue to keep this old guy occupied for a while longer. No, I don't shoot it and I don't twirl it. [emoji38]……fortunately I still have a couple other guns for that.

If you care to, please share your collection centerpiece regardless of what it is.
 
Last edited:
Register to hide this ad
What the heck is 45 Boxer?

Ivan

19t⁹h century version of .45 GAP:p

lestert357, that is an outstanding centerpiece! Mine isn't nearly as vintage, pedigreed or preserved, but I like it and will share. This one left the stable in 1911(a great year for Colt lovers.) Please pardon the poor quality phone pic., it's the only one I have available at the moment.
 

Attachments

  • 20231111_154658.jpg
    20231111_154658.jpg
    80.5 KB · Views: 95
Last edited:
Your post piqued my interest to research the 450 Boxer cartridge. It was the first metallic cartridge to be adopted in 1868 by the British Military. The standard load for this was a 225gr. RNL bullet over 13gr. of FFFFg powder. This gave a velocity in the neighborhood of 700 fps.

Perhaps some Colt SAA chambered in 450 Boxer found their way to Africa and were used during the Zulu War? Interesting and beautiful revolver. Thanks for sharing.
 
About 10 years ago I started dabbling in Colt Single Action Army revolvers again after a 20 hiatus.
My area of interest currently is in Colt SAAs from about 1900 to 1912.
This .38 W.C.F. (.38-40) from 1909 is the nicest I have accumulated this time around.
 

Attachments

  • Colt .38 WCF 1909.jpg
    Colt .38 WCF 1909.jpg
    204.1 KB · Views: 71
  • Colt .38-40 1909.jpg
    Colt .38-40 1909.jpg
    199.7 KB · Views: 47
What the heck is 45 Boxer?

Ivan


The .450 Adams was a British black powder centerfire revolver cartridge, initially used in converted Beaumont—Adams revolvers, in the late 1860s. Officially designated .450 Boxer Mk I, it was the British Army's first centerfire revolver round. I have also seen it referred to as the .450 Eley and .450 Revolver. The Colt factory seemed to use the terms .45 Boxer and .45 Eley interchangeably in factory shipping records and invoices.

The original .450 Boxer Mk1 cartridge had a two-piece case with the base being an iron (later brass) disk and the body made of brass. The body was secured to the iron disk base by the rivet of the boxer primer. I believe you can get an idea of this construction from the below picture. Also pictured with a .44-40 cartridge for size comparison…..
d2ce3dd715e05ccf9f1b9b23b5e87290.jpg

30284cf3629f10793e1d1c844b15d9d2.jpg


There was no head stamp on the original .450 Boxer Mk1 cartridge.

I have 4 of the original Boxer cartridges (like the one pictured above) in the case cartridge block with my Colt, but I would like to completely fill the case cartridge block with examples of the original Boxer cartridge and replace the Kynoch .450 Revolver cartridges which are a later version.
 
Last edited:
I'm impressed that dabbling in Colts results in such beautiful revolvers.
Here's my collection centerpiece- a Myres holster and belt set dated 1935. Owner's initials on both the holster & belt, butterfly motif as favored by S.D. Myres who I believe did the carving on this set. As pictured in Holstory.
1935-dated-Myres-extra-fancy-holster.jpg

Myres-1935-holster-matching-belt.jpg

Myres-1935-holster-matching-belt-and-cartridge-slide.jpg

image.jpg

Regards,
 
Here's my collection centerpiece- a Myres holster and belt set dated 1935. Owner's initials on both the holster & belt, butterfly motif as favored by S.D. Myres who I believe did the carving on this set. As pictured in Holstory.

Absolutely stunning holster and belt rig John. Since it's dated 1935 I have to ask…..is the holster cut for a Registered Magnum? Or a Colt Single Action? Or a Smith or Colt DA with fixed sights?
 
Absolutely stunning holster and belt rig John. Since it's dated 1935 I have to ask…..is the holster cut for a Registered Magnum? Or a Colt Single Action? Or a Smith or Colt DA with fixed sights?

The loops are .38 and the holster fits a medium frame 5" or 6" fixed sight revolver, likely a Military and Police as I think a .41 frame Colt would be too big. I don't think it's ever had a revolver in it and the loops haven't held any cartridges either. I have a surprising number of old plain or fancy holsters that show no signs of ever being used.
Thanks & regards,
 
For anyone that is interested in or wants to know more about the .450 Boxer cartridge, I recommend the book pictured below. The author, Chris Punnett, describes the book as follows:

132 pages, full color on quality gloss
paper with laminated cover, 8½ x 11
inches, wire bound - opens flat for convenience.
Covering the military & commercial
development of the cartridge and the
history of almost 90 companies in 21
countries from the 1860's to current
manufacture. Many obscure companies
not covered in available literature.
Previously unpublished drawings, including
early Royal Laboratory designs,
and other material.
An excellent reference even if you
don't collect .450 cartridges as it covers
a significant period of ammunition
development.
Fully illustrated checklist of 600+
known specimens with their headstamps
(life-size cartridge photographs).
Appendices containing factory drawings,
additional boxes, headstamps
codes, and a detailed index.
ISBN 978-0-9919272-0-3

a4a4baea0fde1e5925ee46f0cf3694af.jpg
 
Last edited:
My S&W centerpiece

OP,
Your Colt SAA is absolutely stunning. Congrats on such a one of a kind example in unbelievable condition.

My Smith centerpiece is a Model 16 K32 Masterpiece from the early 1970s, most likely unfired except for the factory and German proofing. It was shipped with most of the typical options and a red post front sight.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_5001.jpg
    IMG_5001.jpg
    70.6 KB · Views: 17
Back
Top