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Excerpt from This is the story of one
man’s lifetime dream - come true. I finally learned the hard lessons of
imperfect tries, and lifted the phone to make that first call. It took
almost 40 years for me to gain
While the elegant 1911 on these pages represents a tangible final product, a “period” if you will, on my own dream, it also represents what might be. More than simply a statement about a certain piece of steel and ivory that weighs “so” many ounces and shoots “this” size group, this story is about the fact you can do it too. Consider this, then, as motivation, as an example of the fact that yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus, and he may just reside inside of you. It might be time to put away doubts, table the practical side of things and, simply put—make it happen. I hope this masterfully-engraved beauty stirs your heart, and puts your own thoughts into gear. THE BUG BITES The e-mail arrived and when I opened the photo attachment I saw a wonder-of-wonders. Consider yourself having just arrived on the floor of the Colt factory circa-1918 and there, resting in a hand-built wooden box, lies a factory-new slide. Next to it, waiting for final assembly and fitting, resides a corresponding frame. That’s what I saw in Gary’s e-mail photo. My mind began to spin as I contemplated the possibilities If you’re reading Handgunner it’s probably safe to say your heart beats just a tad faster when you see a mint-condition Colt 1911 from the early years. Few things in a handgunner’s life can make their blood as warm as the sight of an unblemished original, factory blue, every line perfect, 1911. I know you know what I mean, and this was what I was looking at. Well, almost. But I could see what those parts could become. The problem with an original gun is two-fold. First, they cost as much as small car and second, even if you found one, the last thing you’d want to do is engrave it or otherwise fuss with it. You probably wouldn’t even shoot it—although you’d sorely want to. And here, before my eyes, was the answer to my dream gun. I’d always wished some aged relative would pass on and leave a mint condition, early model Colt 1911, engraved exactly how I wanted it, with grips exactly how I wanted them, with a few, carefully chosen accessories, exactly how I wanted them. Of course I don’t have any relatives meeting that description. Yet, all was suddenly possible now, in the wink of an arriving e-mail. I know Gary was waiting by his phone, because he answered on the first ring. I spilled-out my dream
project in one, continuous stream-of-consciousness-type thought. “Yes,”
he said, “I know just the guys. Adams and Adams can engrave it and Terry
Tussey can build it,” he said. “Oh yeah, I can supply the slide and
frame,” he added, and I know he was smiling again. “Great fun, this,
isn’t it?” Gary added. I agreed indeed, it was great fun. As Sherlock
THE PISTOL “So can you?” I asked. Tussey let out that patented Tussey-sigh and I could picture him looking over the top of his magnifying visor in semi-disgust. “Tell Gary to send me the parts and then you stay out of my way.” I did. On both counts. Like a classic, clean ‘30s car, Browning’s original 1911 had just the right number of curves and flats to my eye. The improvements made later may have rendered it more shooter-friendly, but nonetheless, detracted from the elegance of the original. Contemplate mag wheels and an automatic transmission on a Duesenberg and you’ll get the picture. This was art-as-pistol and as such, had to be “just so” in order to fill the bill. Tussey understood, but had a trick or two up his sleeve. I asked him for a gun I could shoot, would be accurate and would defend my family if called upon to do so. He gave me that “What are you, stupid?” look as if to tell me “Why would I deliver anything other than that, anyway?” Sorry, Terry. Time passed. Terry phoned. “I got the gun from the engraver. It’s done,” he said. Just like that. “Do you want me to send it on down?” I managed to squeak out a question, “How is it?” “Well, I gotta’ tell you, it’s a pretty nice gun, I’d say,” Terry said, in that same, “What are you, stupid?” voice of his. I could tell, though, from Terry’s voice, he was impressed. And he’s never impressed. The gun arrived. I had to sit down. I had to sit down for a long time. I got some cold water, splashed it on my face, then sat down some more. When my heart calmed, I looked again. It was all I wanted, expected and wished for. It was a dream, but I could hold it in my hand. I felt like a kid and that first, special bike—only more, and better and bigger. This was a good thing, indeed. THE SPECIAL BITS If you’ll notice the sights, you’ll think, at first, they aren’t original. While I’ll be the first to say this pistol represents more of a “feeling” of originality, I still wanted as much authenticity as possible. “Those are original sights,” said Terry on the phone to me. “I managed to find some original Colt drawings from the era showing the exact sight you see. They never went into production, but they did in my shop. Exactly one set, for your gun. And don’t let anyone tell you it’s not right, because it is. And, they work just fine too,” he added, insulted I would have questioned his veracity. Oops. The final result feels exactly right in the hand. And, the sights enhance, rather than detract from the feeling. The pistol is tight, locks-up in a way no original Colt ever did, has a crisp trigger and a safety that goes “snick” like all proper government model safeties should. Terry did his magic and I’ll always be indebted. But he knows that. ENGRAVING The right to keep and
bear arms has always meant a great deal to me and John said he’d be
happy to honor that on the top of the slide. The flying eagle with a
banner clutched in its talons, I SHOT IT The quiet clack-clack of the slide running on a loaded magazine, the press of a crisp trigger and the satisfying recoil telling you something serious is happening here is exactly how it went. I didn’t measure the groups, who cares, but at 15 yards or so, they hovered around the center of the target and could have been easily covered with the bottom of a coffee cup. I was shooting standing, two-handed, a “stand-up” kind of a gun. Terry said it would deliver an inch at 25—and I believe it. I was grinning, almost laughing out loud. Why did I feel so good? You probably know. If you want your own dream, you know where to start. Yours might be in blue, and not engraved—or anything else you can imagine. I’m sure the League can handle it. But mostly, just do it. For more information contact: Caspian Arms Ltd. P.O. Box 465, Hardwick, VT 05843, (802) 472-6454, www.caspianarms.com. Tussey Custom, 24 Moonlight Road, Unit #A, Carson City, NV 89706 (775) 246-1533; ttussey45@aol.com. Adams & Adams Engravers, 7040 VT Rt. 113, P.O. Box 66, Vershire, VT 05079; (802) 685-0019; www.vtgunsmiths.com. Mike Morgan Engraver, 7549 Porter Road, Dixon, CA 95620; (707) 693-1000. |
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