Sunday, January 27, 2013

Arched Mainspring Housing

Eldest and youngest sons came to the house today for Sunday lunch after church, a family tradition. As is also our tradition, the talk turned to guns and we inspected the chromed 1911 I picked up last week. Younger son noticed almost immediately that the gun, with a 1915 serial number, has an arched mainspring housing, and that isn't original nor correct for that period. This observation verifies my belief that this particular handgun is a surplus shooter that has been worked on by several folks over the years. The little gun is a shooter, not a collector piece.

 He then announced his intentions to build a set of scales for the pistol and produced a nice piece of red oak he's been saving for such a project. We went out to the bench where he roughed-out the scales.


He took the Hogue grips off the pistol to do a rough fitting and we found that someone in the past had engraved the front strap of the pistol.  It looks like the beginning of a checkering job, but the points are very flat.  This front strap design might have been a trademark of a gunsmith in the past, much like the Tiger Tooth design was a trademark of Jim Clark.    But, back to my pistol.  Below is a photo of what we found under the Hogue Grip.


I've never seen a front strap pattern like that and I'd love to know who produced it.  Simply knowing would help me understand the history of this pistol.

1 comment:

San Diego Wedding Photography said...

Old type of guns were really awesome. The structure of the guns were like unique. That's why there are more gun owners who collect these kind of guns.