Family heirloom from gun safe 44 S&W SPL

DFairbanks

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Was hoping to identify the model and may year made for this .44 S&W SPL, hand ejector, with 6 3/8 inch barrel, fixed sight, SN 9780, 5 screws on side, yoke number 3568, on the barre is stamped first patent Mar 94. The serial number on the but plate match the one on the cylinder although the but plate is difficult to read. Pictures attached, any help appreciated.
 

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Congratulations! You own an iconic and legendary Smith & Wesson, a .44 Hand Ejector First Model, also known as a Triple Lock.

Barrel length is 6 1/2", probably shipped circa 1914-15.
 
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Thanks for the responses, this gun has a long history in my family, a great great uncle owned it and it passed down from my father to me about 10 years ago. The great great uncle worked as a cowboy on the Matadore ranch out in Texas and I have a picture of him standing with the other cow hands around the catch pen, but he has a jacket on and you can't see if he was wearing the gun.
 
The great great uncle worked as a cowboy on the Matadore ranch out in Texas and I have a picture of him standing with the other cow hands around the catch pen[.]

DFairbanks—Thank you so much for posting all of this. Your photograph shows a massive corral system, comparable to what one would see today at a major operation. I then looked up that Matadore ranch and that is an enormous spread. 130,000 acres, 3000-4000 head of cattle, even today. I would check with them and see if they have a copy of that photograph, I bet they would love to have one of they don't. It would be easy to get copied.
 
DFairbanks, that is an outstanding heirloom! The grips on your TL are commonly called "jigged bone".... basically carved cow bone. The Wof & Klar company of Ft. Worth was a major source of these in that part of Texas. W&K was a major S&W distributor and may actually have been the source for the gun. A SW Historical Foundation letter on your gun might be interesting.
 
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I've sent off for the letter of authenticity already, thanks for the answer on the grips, my dad had always told me it was a bone handle, the original owner was originally from Louisiana and went to Texas to escape law enforcement over the use of that gun. Which ended badly for the person on the wrong end of it.
 
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Was hoping to identify the model and may year made for this .44 S&W SPL, hand ejector, with 6 3/8 inch barrel, fixed sight, SN 9780, 5 screws on side, yoke number 3568, on the barre is stamped first patent Mar 94. The serial number on the but plate match the one on the cylinder although the but plate is difficult to read. Pictures attached, any help appreciated.

Can you take some fresh images outside in indirect outdoor Natural light?

Images so far suggest this may be an old and mellowed re-finish.

Are the Hammer and Trigger Nickle-Plated as well as the rest of it? ( Other than for the Ejector star ).
 
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A 100 year old cowboy Triple Lock migrated from Arkansas to the lower panhandle of Texas, working on a massive ranch, on horseback in the middle of a cattle herd? If it hasn't been refinished at least once I think I would be shocked. I'd bet it may have shipped blue and got a nickel finish and jigged bone grips probably 5-10 years into its working life. Just saying.

Imagine trading down a TL to one cowboy on a named ranch is so far out on the awesome scale in my book...
 
Images so far suggest this may be an old and mellowed re-finish.

Are the Hammer and Trigger Nickle-Plated as well as the rest of it? ( Other than for the Ejector star ).

Posted photographs show an obviously nickel plated hammer and trigger. As the hammer, trigger, and yoke cam were colour case hardened--the latter not so evident as to being case coloured due to diminutive size, just that its finish should not match identically the finish of the rest of the revolver, be it nickel or blued--this means the OPs revolver was renickeled. But the renickel occurred very long ago. It now has a patina to it. I would leave it alone as is and not modify it by polishing or cleaning it.
 
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Posted photographs show an obviously nickel plated hammer and trigger. As the hammer, trigger, and yoke cam were colour case hardened--the latter not so evident as to being case coloured due to diminutive size, just that its finish should not match identically the finish of the rest of the revolver, be it nickel or blued--this means the OPs revolver was renickeled. But the renickel occurred very long ago. It now has a patina to it. I would leave it alone as is and not modify it by polishing or cleaning it.

Seconded. Great gun .
 
Greetings from the Texas Panhandle.
The Matador is about 30 miles from here, next county to the east. Still a working ranch, beef producers. Looks like it might have been blowing dirt when the original picture was made, can't tell for sure. Some things haven't changed much, still lots of that around this part of the world. The current ranch managers/owners are very deep into land care and management, lots of attention to the vegetation system and the grass-wildlife-livestock balance.
 
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