Inherited This .38 Special CTG From My Dad

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I think it belonged to my grandfather, who fought in WW1, or his brother who was in the Army a decade before (I have his Cavalry Saber). here's what I know:

Square butt, wooden grips.
Patent Date on top of the barrel ends with Dec 17, 01.
4 Screws
Serial # on the butt: 21328, also stamped on back of cylinder.
Writing on left side of the barrel: "38 S&W SPECIAL U.S. SERVICE CTG'S"

Pics to follow

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Welcome to the forum. The serial number and barrel profile help identify that as a .38 Hand Ejector Model of 1902 (or Military & Police 1902) that probably shipped in 1902 or 1903. The fact that it has square butt stocks is unusual, as the 1902 has a round butt frame. But those stocks are about a decade younger than the gun itself, so they must be replacements. Is there a spacer between the panels at the lower rear corner to fill up the void you would get when square butt stocks are mounted on a round butt frame?

The "US Service" cartridge at this time was the .38 Colt, which was a little shorter and a little less powerful than the .38 Special. The longer round was developed and introduced by S&W. Within a few years the .38 Colt was history and the .38 Special became the standard round for mid-bore police and military handguns; even Colt adopted it.

That's a nice gun in its own right, but it is particularly special as a family heirloom. Congratulations on having it in the family.

I wouldn't be surprised if your grandfather didn't replace the smallish round-butt stocks with larger and more hand-fuilling square butt stocks himself. Those large deep-dish brass medallions were gone from S&W stocks by 1920.
 
Very nice M&P and how special to know the history of it. A photo of the rear of the gun would be helpful or a side view with the stocks removed. Welcome to the Forum, Bob
 
Very nice M&P and how special to know the history of it. A photo of the rear of the gun would be helpful or a side view with the stocks removed. Welcome to the Forum, Bob

Thanks to both of you for your prompt replies. Here are the photos of the rear of the gun, including some pics of the holster, which I think may be original. It has the brass stud and the slit.

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Welcome to the forum. The serial number and barrel profile help identify that as a .38 Hand Ejector Model of 1902 (or Military & Police 1902) that probably shipped in 1902 or 1903. The fact that it has square butt stocks is unusual, as the 1902 has a round butt frame. But those stocks are about a decade younger than the gun itself, so they must be replacements. Is there a spacer between the panels at the lower rear corner to fill up the void you would get when square butt stocks are mounted on a round butt frame?

The "US Service" cartridge at this time was the .38 Colt, which was a little shorter and a little less powerful than the .38 Special. The longer round was developed and introduced by S&W. Within a few years the .38 Colt was history and the .38 Special became the standard round for mid-bore police and military handguns; even Colt adopted it.

That's a nice gun in its own right, but it is particularly special as a family heirloom. Congratulations on having it in the family.

I wouldn't be surprised if your grandfather didn't replace the smallish round-butt stocks with larger and more hand-fuilling square butt stocks himself. Those large deep-dish brass medallions were gone from S&W stocks by 1920.

I don't see any spacers on the butt (pics posted above). What I know is that my grandfather ran away from home in his teens and walked from barnstead NH to New Bedford around the turn of the century and shipped out on the last sailing whaler to depart port from New England. His name is on the ship rolls in the bedford whaling musem. Because he had several brothers there were a lot of guns in the family that passed down over the years. In the 60's my dad reached out to all of them and told them he would buy any family gun they wanted to sell for top dollar. We ended up with a TON of them. This is the most beat-up hangun of the collection, but some of the riflles go back to the 1700's, because we all served in the military and we all were sportsmen. I decided to look at the collection seriously last week and I was astonished. None of these weapons are for sale, they are family weapons. But my mom wanted me to take stock because she's getting on in years.
 
That grip frame has been modified extensively. If possible, take off the grips and
get a side-view picture of the grip frame. If you look at the butt, you'll see two
lines, that look like where the metal was added.

All early 1902's were round-butt frames. Square butts didn't come along until late
1904, early 1905, at about serial number 50,000. Someone has welded the grip frame
up, and then checkered the backstrap. A picture of the grip frame ought to reveal
how much metal was added.

Mike Priwer
 
That grip frame has been modified extensively. If possible, take off the grips and
get a side-view picture of the grip frame. If you look at the butt, you'll see two
lines, that look like where the metal was added.

All early 1902's were round-butt frames. Square butts didn't come along until late
1904, early 1905, at about serial number 50,000. Someone has welded the grip frame
up, and then checkered the backstrap. A picture of the grip frame ought to reveal
how much metal was added.

Mike Priwer

Ok, pulling it apart right now.
 
That's a quite unique and well done "improvement" for the time. I can understand as I prefer a sq butt that "fits" my hand better for shooting.

Do you think the wood grips are actual S@W grips from 1905 or later? If I hadn't been told to remove them I would have assumed they were original.
 
I have nothing to add to what the fellows above have said (some of the most knowledgeable members of the forum) other than that is a really neat modification to the revolver. And you're right--the fitting was skillfully done.

I'm glad you and your Dad were able to keep the guns in the family.
 
IMHO worth a letter from Roy Jinks just for the family history. Dobut it will address the modification.
 
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Oh- ignore the beer in the background.[/QUOTE]

How can one ignore a Dos Equis? Now I'm thirsty, be right back! :D
 
Actually a 5-screw???

In all the excitement discussing the grip modifications, no one corrected The Hairy Beast in his description of this revolver...this is a 5-screw, not a 4-screw. Isn't that a screw I see in front of the trigger guard, and 4 on the frame? Nice old six shooter, cherish it and pass it down to the kids.
 
That's really a fascinating modification--and your photos are excellent, BTW. Do you have any idea when this conversion was done?
 
Rubber Stamp:
There is no such thing as a "CTG" Model. CTG is an abbreviation for cartridge. The barrel stamping is the caliber, not the model.
Denis
 
Great gun and history; and it sure looks like the frame modification was done by a very skillful person. Question: did the modification eliminate the strain screw (it appears to be presently shimmed), or was that feature not present in these early M&P's?

No, there's a strain screw. Looks like they drilled and retapped the hole after adding the steel. Here's a closeup of the butt. You can see the screw. It's not apparent in the disassembled shots because I took the strain screw out accidentally when disassembling the grips.

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In all the excitement discussing the grip modifications, no one corrected The Hairy Beast in his description of this revolver...this is a 5-screw, not a 4-screw. Isn't that a screw I see in front of the trigger guard, and 4 on the frame? Nice old six shooter, cherish it and pass it down to the kids.

No, there is no screw ahead of the trigger guard, that's the first thing I looked for after reading the other CTG posts on this forum. I'll post a pic later, the gun's not handy right now.
 
That's really a fascinating modification--and your photos are excellent, BTW. Do you have any idea when this conversion was done?

I've done some research and I'm re-thinking the provenance of the weapon. I now believe the mod happened in the late 1950's. My grandfather was a founding member of the NH chapter of the NRA and sometime around 1959-60 they were offered a deal from either the Army or maybe it was Smith & Wesson, to purchase WW1 Springfield rifles for practically nothing. They came packed in Cosmoline. We know my Grandfather purchased one 30.06 and so did my Uncle. I think he may have bought this revolver as well, because it's a Springfield too. So my guess is he modified it then, because my Uncle had the 30.06 he purchased re-blued and fitted with a hunting stock. It would make sense that Gramps sent the handgun along to have that refitted with a new butt at the same time, either because he'd just bought it or because he wanted to spruce up his old Army pistol.
 
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