SloopJohnB
10-21-2013, 07:45
Need some help evaluating a Colt 1911 I recently picked up.
I just acquired a nice re-arsenalled Colt 1911that appears to have been made in 1913. It is a bit of a "mixmaster" that is an Augusta Arsenal re-build ("AA" stamped on L/H side of frame), and was sold through DCM/NRA in July 1961. I got it, complete with paperwork from the original purchaser.
Serial # 46889 I believe puts it around 1913. The slide appears to be a later one from around serial #285,000, the barrel looks like it has a faint "HS" (hard to tell because everything was parkerized at the arsenal). Hammer is a narrow spur (Colt?), and I'm guessing the grip safety is late Colt/Rem Rand. Don't know about the thumb safety. Grips are in nice shape w/no cracks chips, and appear original to the gun.
While this is obviously not a collector piece, it is an excellent example of an early re-built 1911 with provenance to when it was released by the military, and a single owner since that time. The gun looks very nice and shoots just fine!
I would very much appreciate any info/comments you 1911 people would care to share, along with any "ballpark" estimates as to current value as is, and estimated value of what the stocks alone might be worth.
Thank you all in advance to Scott, Johnny P, Duane, and the rest of you 1911 collectors.
I just acquired a nice re-arsenalled Colt 1911that appears to have been made in 1913. It is a bit of a "mixmaster" that is an Augusta Arsenal re-build ("AA" stamped on L/H side of frame), and was sold through DCM/NRA in July 1961. I got it, complete with paperwork from the original purchaser.
Serial # 46889 I believe puts it around 1913. The slide appears to be a later one from around serial #285,000, the barrel looks like it has a faint "HS" (hard to tell because everything was parkerized at the arsenal). Hammer is a narrow spur (Colt?), and I'm guessing the grip safety is late Colt/Rem Rand. Don't know about the thumb safety. Grips are in nice shape w/no cracks chips, and appear original to the gun.
While this is obviously not a collector piece, it is an excellent example of an early re-built 1911 with provenance to when it was released by the military, and a single owner since that time. The gun looks very nice and shoots just fine!
I would very much appreciate any info/comments you 1911 people would care to share, along with any "ballpark" estimates as to current value as is, and estimated value of what the stocks alone might be worth.
Thank you all in advance to Scott, Johnny P, Duane, and the rest of you 1911 collectors.