Model 15-3 with “OR. CO. CAL.” stamped

Draw4u

Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2017
Messages
67
Reaction score
90
Location
SW Missouri
I recently did some trading on a model 15–3, 4" with target hammer, target trigger and adjustable target sites. On the left side of the frame, below the cylinder, it is stamped with "OR. CO. CAL.". I was told this was for Orange County California. Does this seem correct? Would this have been some thing that a local sheriffs office would have had stamped? Just wondering about the potential history?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3010.jpg
    IMG_3010.jpg
    37.8 KB · Views: 242
Register to hide this ad
Cool LE marked gun
I read that here on the forum too. Orange County California
Mostly likely for Sheriff, Marshals and other County LE.
I have a 15-3 marked identical. They also marked later 15-5 with the heavier profile barrel.

Interesting mine and others I have seen are marked
OR. CO. CA.

If I recall while I was in grade school at the time there was a push on correct state abbreviation. No more 3 letter and they went to 2 letters. But I was not the best student and I don't recall exactly the time period this was. Those years are very foggy to me now.
 
Last edited:
Maybe I'm wrong but somehow, I'm not so sure.
Sheriff's departments are commonly abbreviated as "SD", and "CAL" is an obsolete (and long) way of abbreviating California.
I would give it some more thought.
 
State Postal Codes Changed To Two Letters

October 1963:

To make room for the ZIP Code, state names needed to be abbreviated. The Department provided an initial list of abbreviations in June 1963, but many had three or four letters, which was still too long. In October 1963, the Department settled on the current two-letter abbreviations.

Not only the date, but the explanation of the reason for the change.
 
Last edited:
Lots to consider and this one was manuf in 1975 so it was well after the abbreviation dates. I assume it stands for Orange County California but not sure if it was a LEO firearm or someone just put it on the firearm for a personal reason. Hard to know.
 
During the mid-1980s I confiscated a Model 15 from a traveling criminal that was so marked. While I don't recall whether the state portion of the marking was CA or CAL, it was in NCIC as reported stolen by the Orange County Marshal's office and had been taken from the personal vehicle of one of their officers. The font and location was, as best I recall, the same as on yours.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for that info! I have seen some others that are confirmed as Orange County, with just the CA in lieu of the CAL, but as you say, they are same location and identical font and font size. I don't plan on getting rid of it and hopefully I am able to confirm someday, just so I know the history of it.
 
Very cool find! The 15-3's were a very prolific law enforcement revolver in that era. I became a deputy for a California Bay Area County (Contra Costa, or affectionately "COCO") in 1990. My issued gun was a 1975 15-3 and I am proud to still have it. I rarely saw a marked hand gun in my county. If memory serves me correctly I only saw one.
 
Not sure about the OP's Orange County 15, but my Contra Costa 15 was SA/DA.
eSGrJLG.jpg
 
We have an unmarked LAPD model 15 which was/is converted by the police dept. This one was owned by a detective which leads me to believe this revolver was only used for occasional uniform/ceremony dress as it is still very minty. He later became a lawyer and is probably gone as he was in his 80's when I purchased the gun in the early 2000s'….paid $175 for this cherry…cheers
 
I recently did some trading on a model 15–3, 4" with target hammer, target trigger and adjustable target sites. On the left side of the frame, below the cylinder, it is stamped with "OR. CO. CAL.". I was told this was for Orange County California. Does this seem correct? Would this have been some thing that a local sheriffs office would have had stamped? Just wondering about the potential history?

Orange County Law Enforcement is more than just the Sheriff. They have Marshals, Constables, Parks, Schools, Transit Authority, DA Investigators, et cetera and etc.

It seems correct to me. Plus I was doing Investigations, 40 years ago and we were still doing three and four letter state abbreviations then. So I can see the Range Staff using CA or CAL depending on if Thomas, Richard or Harold got stuck doing the stamping.
 
LAPD made their revolvers DAO and LA Sheriff were DA/SA. The smaller Departments decided on one or another.

Thanks Sgt Rock. My LAPD 15-3 came DAO from the factory, but it has a normal hammer. I've been told that when they switched from 6 inch 14's to 4 inch 15's, several 6 inch guns went back to the factory for a 2 inch reduction. It's all interesting history to me.
 
October 1963:

To make room for the ZIP Code, state names needed to be abbreviated. The Department provided an initial list of abbreviations in June 1963, but many had three or four letters, which was still too long. In October 1963, the Department settled on the current two-letter abbreviations.

Not only the date, but the explanation of the reason for the change.
However, the post office didn't really push anyone to use that two letter abbreviation until at least the late 60's / early 70's.
I remember still using the old 4 letter abbreviation for my state when I was high school, during the late 70's, so the change over was gradual, to say the least.
 
Thanks for that info! I have seen some others that are confirmed as Orange County, with just the CA in lieu of the CAL, but as you say, they are same location and identical font and font size. I don't plan on getting rid of it and hopefully I am able to confirm someday, just so I know the history of it.
Have you tried emailing S&W the gun's serial # and seeing what they have to say about it?
Might also be a good chance to ask if they were the one's who put the lettering on the gun.
If it was an LEO gun, chances are good, the factory order would've gone to some law office.....hopefully in Orange County, Calif. (see what I did there? :D)
 
Last edited:
Great and interesting information here! Thank you everyone for chiming in! I did send the serial number to S&W and they were not able to tell me much about it other than it was made in 1975, but I guess there is another department there that I can pay and they can do some deeper research? Not really sure.
 
Great and interesting information here! Thank you everyone for chiming in! I did send the serial number to S&W and they were not able to tell me much about it other than it was made in 1975, but I guess there is another department there that I can pay and they can do some deeper research? Not really sure.
Sounds like things have changed.
I wrote to them 20+ years ago, about why no .44 K-frame, and we ended trading about 3 or 4 emails.
If you're curious about the gun, it will always eat at you.
Pay the fee, and have them do the research.
Then you can sleep.
...btw, if I haven't said so already, that's a beautiful gun you have.
The 15 (and the 67) are among my faves...thus my name. ;)
 
Last edited:
Sounds like things have changed.
I wrote to them 20+ years ago, about why no .44 K-frame, and we ended trading about 3 or 4 emails.
If you're curious about the gun, it will always eat at you.
Pay the fee, and have them do the research.
Then you can sleep.
...btw, if I haven't said so already, that's a beautiful gun you have.
The 15 (and the 67) are among my faves...thus my name. ;)

Yeah, I might look into it more as time allows. For now, it will just sit in the safe with its new friends. Lol!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3017.jpeg
    IMG_3017.jpeg
    164 KB · Views: 24
Very cool find! The 15-3's were a very prolific law enforcement revolver in that era. I became a deputy for a California Bay Area County (Contra Costa, or affectionately "COCO") in 1990. My issued gun was a 1975 15-3 and I am proud to still have it. I rarely saw a marked hand gun in my county. If memory serves me correctly I only saw one.
The gun in question reminds me of the wind guns used on ADAM-12, also in LA. Just last weekend on a drive in your old stomping ground, or close to it, we took a pit stop on Lake Herman Rd., where in the 60s the Zodiac killer struck twice.
 
Revolvers still in use

In Illinois up until at least 2019 the Model 66 Revolvers werre still in use in State corrections facilities, and I have no doubt many are still in use across the country.
Initials could be Corrections, County, or the abbreviation of the County name in multiple areas, but I suspect that your guess is pretty spot on.

Enjoy your souvenir from a time gone by.

In Illinois with the passing of some really stupid new laws, that limit handguns to 15 rounds, the revolver has enjoyed a real resurgence in use. I cant carry several of my semiauto pistols, because I dont have less that 15 round mags, but all my revolvers still will put the rounds where I want them.
 
Had this a long time.

Love the grips came on it.

Asked a question or two, but no box. Great K frame.

Wish I hadn't sold my 2" 15. That gun was very accurate, and I traded it off ( with a pretty decent profit) to buy a 4" for the full length ejection and increased sight radius. Honestly I don't shoot the 4" any better than I did the 2", and there is a certain character to the 2" 15 that I miss, maybe someday I can find another
 
My 1966 Revolver

My first CA Duty Revolver, it was DA/SA. Issued ammunition was Federal 158 grain LRN and we were issued Dump Pouches.
 

Attachments

  • 0391516B-34BF-404B-8094-F8D319F80F16.jpg
    0391516B-34BF-404B-8094-F8D319F80F16.jpg
    34.4 KB · Views: 20
Last edited:
Here is mine,

Not sure if this clears or muddies the water but mine is marked OR. CO. CAL. it is a 15-5, has an AUH serial number prefix, and Is DA/SA. As you can see, the fellow doing the stamping looks to have had too much coffee that morning or too much booze the previous night.

Bought it at the On Target shooting range in Laguna Niguel, while living in Orange County California about ten years ago. I have an affinity for model 15s in general, but I think the heavy profile barrel balances best of them all.
 

Attachments

  • 15 OR CO CAL 2.jpg
    15 OR CO CAL 2.jpg
    91.8 KB · Views: 33
I recently did some trading on a model 15–3, 4" with target hammer, target trigger and adjustable target sites. On the left side of the frame, below the cylinder, it is stamped with "OR. CO. CAL.". I was told this was for Orange County California. Does this seem correct? Would this have been some thing that a local sheriffs office would have had stamped? Just wondering about the potential history?

That is correct. Orange County SO carried model 15's as did a lot of other Orange County agencies.
 
Back
Top