ordnanceguy
Member
Gentlemen:
I was cleaning this one today and it ended up looking so nice and shiny that I decided to take a couple of quick pics of it. The light was right.
Although I am mostly a Victory collector, I bought this gun years ago because, as a left over Victory frame, it had some Victory features. It also attracted me as a fairly scarce, early post-war factory nickel gun. The great bulk of the early (1946-47) long action guns were blued.
It is a five inch .38 Special with serial S815204. It has the N-mark in all of the usual places indicating factory nickel finish. It also has the small "s" mark on the side plate which was originally intended on Victories to show that the revolver had the improved safety hammer block.
The butt shows the plugged lanyard ring hole, another feature of a left over Victory frame.
The factory letter on it shows that it shipped as a factory nickel gun on March 27, 1946. It went to House - Hasson Hardware Company in Knoxville, Tennessee as 1 of 12 units in the shipment in the same configuration. The Invoice that accompanied the Letter indicated that all in the shipment had Magna stocks.
The right side. It is not a mint gun but I thought it looked fairly presentable after its cleaning today.
There were a relative handful of factory nickel SV-prefix guns that shipped post-war. I show 4 in the SV-811000 range in the Victory Model Database.
I would love to find one of those.
This one is the lowest serial numbered S-prefix M+P with factory nickel that I am aware of. Of course, there were 11 other nickel guns in the same shipment, too, so there is a very good chance that there are some lower numbers. Has anyone seen a lower serialed S-prefix gun in nickel? I am sure that Jack has the answer on that one.
I was cleaning this one today and it ended up looking so nice and shiny that I decided to take a couple of quick pics of it. The light was right.
Although I am mostly a Victory collector, I bought this gun years ago because, as a left over Victory frame, it had some Victory features. It also attracted me as a fairly scarce, early post-war factory nickel gun. The great bulk of the early (1946-47) long action guns were blued.

It is a five inch .38 Special with serial S815204. It has the N-mark in all of the usual places indicating factory nickel finish. It also has the small "s" mark on the side plate which was originally intended on Victories to show that the revolver had the improved safety hammer block.
The butt shows the plugged lanyard ring hole, another feature of a left over Victory frame.

The factory letter on it shows that it shipped as a factory nickel gun on March 27, 1946. It went to House - Hasson Hardware Company in Knoxville, Tennessee as 1 of 12 units in the shipment in the same configuration. The Invoice that accompanied the Letter indicated that all in the shipment had Magna stocks.

The right side. It is not a mint gun but I thought it looked fairly presentable after its cleaning today.

There were a relative handful of factory nickel SV-prefix guns that shipped post-war. I show 4 in the SV-811000 range in the Victory Model Database.
I would love to find one of those.
This one is the lowest serial numbered S-prefix M+P with factory nickel that I am aware of. Of course, there were 11 other nickel guns in the same shipment, too, so there is a very good chance that there are some lower numbers. Has anyone seen a lower serialed S-prefix gun in nickel? I am sure that Jack has the answer on that one.