The M1877 was designed by one of the inventors of the Colt Single Action Army, William Mason, as Colt's first attempt at manufacturing a double-action revolver. It was the first successful US-made double-action cartridge revolver and was offered from the factory in two basic finishes: nickel-plated or a blued with a case-colored frame. The revolver was available in barrel lengths from 2.5" to 5.5". The shorter-barreled versions had no provision for an ejector rod were marketed as "shopkeeper's specials" for use as a concealable pocket pistol.
The pistol was offered in three different calibers; the .32 "Rainmaker", the .38 "Lightning" and the .41 "Thunderer". None of these nicknames were Colt designations, nor used by the factory in any reference materials. Both terms were coined by Benjamin Kittredge, one of Colt's major distributors. Kittredge was responsible for the terms "Peacemaker" for the Single Action Army, "Omnipotent" for the Colt M1878 double-action (often known as the "Frontier" model), and nicknames for the various chamberings of the New Line models.
Outwardly, the Model 1877 shows a striking resemblance to the Colt Single Action Army revolver, however, it is scaled down slightly and much thinner in dimension. The bird's head grips were of checkered rosewood on the early guns and hard rubber on the majority of later-production guns.
The "Lightning" was the favored personal weapon of Old West outlaw John Wesley Hardin, who frequently used both "Lightning" and "Thunderer" versions; and the "Thunderer" was the preferred weapon of Billy the Kid, and was even carried by him when he was killed by Pat Garrett in 1881. Doc Holliday was also known to carry a nickel-plated "Thunderer" in his waistband as an accompanying gun to his nickel-plated Colt 1873. Both had ivory grips.
This particular M1877 is a "Thunderer", the largest ad most powerful of the 1877 series of pistols and chambered in the venerable .41 Colt. It is mechanically excellent and features quite a bit of original vibrant bluing and vivid case colors; particularly in the protected areas. It is all matching, and its serial number places its date of manufacture in 1906. Interestingly, Colt only made roughly 166,000 Model 1877 revolvers, making this pistol one of the very last gun's "out the door" before production ceased.
This pistol functions flawlessly on both double and single action and features a solid lock up.
The black hard rubber grips are in great shape with no cracks or chips and fit the pistol very well.
All the serial numbers match and there are no replacement parts.
The bore and all six chambers are good with sharp rifling and no major rust or pitting to speak of.
*This weapon was made after 1899 and MUST be shipped to Federal Firearms License holder for transfer. Never bought a gun through an FFL before? Give us a call at (262) 473-5444 and we'd be glad to walk you through this simple process.