Tag Archives: colt agent

Collector’s Dream: A Visit to the Colt Archives

While visiting Colt in Connecticut recently, we were within striking distance of the Colt Archives, so you know we had to stop in and check it out.

We visited Colt historian Beverly Haynes and her staff of dedicated archivists, who have decades of historical research experience within the Colt factory records. And the demand is fierce, with more than 7,000 research requests filed per year. That’s 150 to 200 letters a week. The average turnaround time is 120 days, and requests, unless expedited, are researched on a first-come, first-served basis.

Samuel Colt’s Firearms Manufacturing Company dates to 1855, and while some of the earliest records of production books, invoices, and shipments have been lost to history, the Archives has a tremendous amount of data on hand.

Colt archives
You can almost smell the history…
Colt archives
It can be a challenge to read older handwritten records, such as this one from 1862, during the height of the Civil War, listing guns headed to the Washington Arsenal and New York State Armory. (Photos: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
Colt archives
While many of the records have been digitized and are in controlled storage off-site, the Archives has some books on hand. 
Colt archives
Rows of them…

On a personal note, I have sent in requests in the past for research letters from the Archives and have been delighted with the results. However, keep in mind that the historians can only report what they find, which may be very detailed and interesting, or scant. The books only hold so much data.

As it was, I had a pending record with the Archives that I had sent in months prior that was nearing completion when we visited. It was on a circa-1967 Colt Agent.

Colt agent
While it had replacement Pachymar grips when I bought it that were not correct to the gun, it also had a very well-fitted Colt-marked hammer shroud that looked way too good to be aftermarket. 
Colt Agent Colt archives
It turns out that my guess was right, and the Archives were able to find that the Agent left the factory with a shroud installed. Super happy = me.

Check out the full 16-minute video we made at the Archives, here. 

We want to thank Beverly and her crew at the Colt Archives for opening their doors to us.

Old School Cool: If John Wick was Set in 1983

With “John Wick: Chapter 4” scheduled to be released this week, I thought it would be interesting to show just how far the tactical-practical shooting concept has come in the past 40 years. If you go with the aspect of mid-1980s staples, I came up with a list of pro-tips and mods from yesteryear that often still make their rounds today.

More in my column at Guns.com.

Secret Agent Man…

Colt really pioneered the modern small-frame revolver when it introduced the Detective Special, fundamentally an abbreviated Police Positive Special with a 2-inch barrel, in 1927. Introduced at the height of Prohibition and the era of the great automobile-borne gangsters of the “Roaring Twenties,” the Colt Detective soon became a hit and was successful enough to remain in production until 1995, which is one heck of a run.

Immediately after World War II, Colt pioneered making handguns with such “Atomic Age” aerospace materials as early aluminum. With the material dubbed “Coltalloy” at the time, Colt introduced an aluminum-framed variant of the popular Detective Special in 1950 named the Cobra– the company’s very first of an extensive line of “Snake Guns.”

The same footprint as the 21-ounce all-steel Detective, the Cobra lost more than a quarter-pound of weight, hitting the scales closer to 15 ounces with the same 6-shot capacity.

In 1955, Colt responded to the newly introduced and popular S&W Chief’s Special by moving to make the Cobra even more compact. Taking the aluminum-framed 6-shooter and trimming the length of the grip frame down while keeping everything else intact, the Agent was born.

More in my column at Guns.com.

The Colt Detective Special

Twenty years before Smith and Wesson gave the world their Chief’s Special, Colt pioneered the snub-nosed revolver. A handy six-shooter with a 2-inch barrel, the Colt gun was revolutionary for its day and is still viable nearly a century later. Colt called it the Detective Special.

In the 1920s, a new wave of Prohibition criminals such as John Dillinger, Machinegun Kelly, and Clyde Barrow captured the public’s imagination. They also scared the crap out of law enforcement. With these criminals being equipped with high-powered Thompson subguns bought over the counter, coupled with weapons stolen from National Guard armories, law enforcement needed to upgrade their sidearms. Plainclothes detectives either had to carry full sized revolvers or pistols, or were forced to tote small and ineffective European revolvers in tiny calibers such as the Velo Dog. What they needed was a handgun capable of being carried concealed, yet still chambered in an effective caliber.

Enter the Colt Detective…

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

colt detective