Sam Colt: The Forgotten History of America’s Legendary Firearms Inventor and Manufacturer

Sam Colt

Born on July 19, 1814, in Hartford, Connecticut, Samuel Colt played a vital role in American culture and folklore. The inventor and creator of the first handheld revolver, Sam Colt made it possible to have a handgun that could fire rapidly without needing to be reloaded after every shot. Known as the great equalizer, it’s been said that “Abe Lincoln may have freed all men, but Sam Colt made them equal.”

Colt’s knack for inventing and his passion for firearms paved the way for the American fascination with guns. Some would argue that it’s because of Samuel Colt (and his shrewd business and advertising sense) that Colt became a household name, both during his lifetime and now, 200 years after his birth.

Sam Colt: From Tinkerer to Inventor

From the time he was a boy, Sam Colt liked to tinker with mechanics. He’d take things apart just to learn how they’d work. After studying the mechanics, he’d attempt to rebuild them. Sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn’t.

But young Sam had perseverance and he wasn’t one to be discouraged by a little failure, a trait that would suit him well throughout his life. Although his interest in mechanics was soon coupled with explosives, Sam joined his father’s textile company at 15, but he didn’t last long. After exploding a raft during a Fourth of July party, his father sent him away to boarding school, where Sam studied navigation.

During the following year, in 1830, Colt was expelled, again over a Fourth of July incident. This time, the young man demonstrated self-made explosives for his classmates, much to the dismay of the school’s administrators.

At his wit’s end, Sam’s father decided to give him a real lesson in navigation and sent him to become a seaman. It was this decision that led to the revolver and forever changed not only Sam’s life, but also the culture of America.

The Revolver: An Idea Discovered at Sea

It was while sailing to Calcutta that Colt was inspired by the ship’s wheel and began to design what would eventually become the world’s first rotation-style firearm. It intrigued him that no matter what direction the wheel moved, the spokes were aligned to the clutch in such a way that certain positions would allow the wheel to spin freely or lock it in place.

While still at sea, Sam carved a wooden prototype of his idea, which would allow a gun to house multiple bullets for firing, without risk of igniting them all at once.

Upon returning to the States in 1832, Sam petitioned his father, who sponsored the production of both a rifle and a pistol, each featuring Colt’s revolving chamber. Unfortunately, his father was not impressed with Sam’s design and refused to monetarily back either weapon.

But the 20-year-old Colt would not be discouraged. He spent the next two years travelling the country as “the Celebrated Dr. Coult of New York, London, and Calcutta,” entertaining and educating audiences about nitrous oxide and its effects. It was his profits from this tour that would build his next attempt at a pistol with a revolving chamber.

How Sam Colt Became a Gun Manufacturing Tycoon

In 1835, Samuel Colt received his first European patent for a revolving-chamber pistol. The following year, in 1836, he received one from the U.S. It was this same year, at the age of 22, that he built his first manufacturing plant in Paterson, New Jersey – Colt’s Patent Arms Manufacturing Company – which produced the Colt Paterson pistol. The original five-cylinder revolver came chambered in both .28 and .36 caliber, and had about as much power as a modern .380 ACP round.

The Paterson pistol allowed shooters to fire five shots in rapid succession. Before this revolutionary revolver, each shot required about 20 seconds to reload. Colt made an estimated 2,800 of these handguns and, although they were used in Florida during the Second Seminole War, the U.S. military decided the precision caps were too modern and untrustworthy for battle.

The Republic of Texas bought 180 of Colt’s new firearms to assist in arming the sovereign’s new Navy. When the surplus eventually fell to the hands of the Texas Rangers, they quickly came to appreciate the weapon’s efficiency and speed. During the Battle of Bandera Pass, where the Rangers were able to shoot 10 shots with two revolvers, the Colt Paterson had a significant influence in turning the tide of the Texas-Indian Wars.

Although these guns were showing their strength in the Old West with the Texas Rangers, many gun carriers were leary about the new firearm and preferred their trusted muskets. Without military support for Colt’s revolving gun, the company lost money and temporarily closed in 1842.

But Sam Colt wasn’t someone who gave up. And by 1845, word was getting around that front-line soldiers were seeing massive success with the innovative firearm and that these guns played critical roles in the victories that were starting to occur against the Native Americans.

With the dawning of the Mexican-American War in 1846, Colt was commissioned to arm the U.S. military. The Colt Manufacturing Company became the first private company to mass produce firearms, and from 1836 to 1861, they built an average of 1,000 guns a year. By 1865, Colt was the largest gun supplier to the Union Army, providing 386,417 revolvers throughout the Civil War.

Sam Colt: Shrewd Businessman and Marketing Genius

Sam Colt had a product he knew he could sell and in 1836, he started his first advertising campaign. He intentionally targeted America’s growing middle class, a group of people who suddenly had surplus time and funds. Following the British aristocrats, many of early America’s middle class turned to hunting for sport and Colt used that to his advantage, offering a gun that makes the process easier and much more effective.

Colt’s tactics went beyond strategic newspaper advertising and product placement. He ran ads depicting masculine men using Colt revolvers to protect their families. He commissioned artists to create paintings featuring Colt guns, putting them in exciting places and exotic territories.

And since few knew how to handle and care for firearms, he added simple instructions for gun maintenance on a provided cleaning cloth with every revolver, showing that all could learn to use a firearm and realize the benefits of gun ownership.

What’s more, Sam Colt was known to be extravagant, especially when it came to wining and dining. He’d treat top businessmen and members of Congress to dinner and drinks. He also gave lavish revolvers, often ornamented with engravings and gold, to military officials, European royalty, and Russian Czars. He even gave President Andrew Jackson a custom Colt handgun.

And then something happened – gun ownership in America began to grow. From 1830 through 1850 alone, wills mentioning gun ownership rose 50 percent. And in 1855, Sam Colt had incorporated offices in Hartford, New York City, and London, and was producing 150 guns a day. By the dawning of the Civil War, his Connecticut plant employed over 1,000 people. By the time of his death on January 10, 1862, at the age of 47, it’s estimated that the Colt company had produced over 400,000 firearms.

Sam Colt: The Legend and His Legacy

Sam Colt’s name is attached to many of America’s most iconic revolvers, partially because he held a manufacturing monopoly on them for decades. Perhaps the most revered of firearms designed and manufactured by Colt himself, is the 1873 Peacemaker, coined the most popular gun in the West.

Then there are the other esteemed firearms manufactured by the Colt company, including:

Sam Colt changed the firearm industry almost more than any other individual, but he did more than that. As an inventor, his creations weren’t limited to gunpower and steel. Colt is responsible for leading America in the interchangeable parts system of manufacturing. He built the first remote naval mine explosive, and created the waterproof cables that allowed Samuel Morse to run telegraph lines beneath the sea.

At his death at the age of 47, Sam left behind his wife, Elizabeth Jarvis, who he married five years beforehand in 1856. Of their five children, only Caldwell Hart Colt survived past infancy. His wife and son were left well taken care of with their mansion, Armsmear, and an estate worth $15 million, which is estimated to be around $350 million today. Even more astounding, the value of Colt’s estate was, at the time, 1/1,000 of the country’s total GNP. Today, that makes his fortune equivalent to about $17 billion.

A Farewell to Be Remembered

When the man whose name became synonymous with revolver (the French word for revolver is Le Colt) died, the town of Hartford, Connecticut, mourned for their loss and celebrated his life. It’s said that Colt’s funeral rivaled the last act of a great opera. Fifteen hundred of his employees showed up to show their final respect, each with a black band tied around their arms.

Sam’s casket was visited by Company A, 12th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers, a guard that he had personally armed. They were followed by the Putnam Phalanx, the Connecticut honor guard, and then thousands of people from Hartford watched as Colt’s remains were carried to a private graveyard on his estate.

In 1894, when Colt’s only surviving child died, Elizabeth had Sam’s body, along with the remains of their other four children, moved to Cedar Hill Cemetery. Today, the public can visit Sam’s grave, along with the rest of the Colt family.

Sam Colt: The Forgotten History of America’s Legendary Firearms Inventor and Manufacturer originally appeared in The Resistance Library at Ammo.com.

Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise

Author: Sam Jacobs

Sam Jacobs is the lead writer and chief historian at Ammo.com. His writing for Ammo.com's Resistance Library has been featured by USA Today, Reason, Bloomberg's Business Week, Zero Hedge, The Guardian, and National Review as well as many other prominent news and alt-news publications. Ammo.com believes that arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. That the rights codified in our Bill of Rights were not given to us in a document, but by our Creator. That an unalienable right is God-given. It isn't granted by a president, a king, or any government – otherwise it can be taken away.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
30 Comments
Walt
Walt
February 25, 2022 7:58 pm

He could have made the 1911 a bit easier to strip tho. Can’t beat a Glock for that.

Cedartown Mark
Cedartown Mark
  Walt
February 25, 2022 8:14 pm

I would take a Colt Cobra in 357mag over a Glock 19 any day of the week.

c

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Cedartown Mark
February 25, 2022 8:52 pm

I would not.
But that doesn’t mean your choice is wrong.
BTW, Until my canoe tipped over I had both.
And weep over the loss of both

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Cedartown Mark
February 26, 2022 2:37 pm

Tom Grisham, Gun Talk says he carries both most of the time, semi-auto and revolver. Don’t know he said what manufacturer.
bucknp

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Anonymous
February 26, 2022 8:04 pm

It is very wise.
You draw the Semi first because it has a very high rate of fire,
When it works flawlessly. If there is a malfunction, a revolver
only misfires because of bad ammo. If the hammer falls on
that round, simply pull the trigger again.
There is always a traded-off.

Foot in the Forest
Foot in the Forest
  Walt
February 26, 2022 9:34 am

You have to talk to the ghost of John Browning for that issue.

Melty
Melty
  Walt
February 26, 2022 9:39 am

I don’t think he had any hand in the 1911. That was John Moses Browning.

bucknp
bucknp
  Walt
February 26, 2022 2:35 pm

“Technology” was not “there” at the time…just saying.

WillyB
WillyB
February 25, 2022 8:07 pm

I have two of the now well known firearms from Sam Colt’s company: A Colt XSE (modern 1911) and a Colt AR-15. The XSE is the handgun I shoot most accurately. The AR I bought to see if I could be a better shot with it now than I was with my Colt M-16 in Vietnam.

Since Sam died, his company has had the misfortune of bad management and bad unions. He should have moved his company to Texas or Tennessee. Third party designs have kept the company going. John Moses Browning designed the pistol that came to be known as the 1911. Eugene Stoner of ArmaLite, designed the AR-15. Those two designs are still the bread and butter of Colt’s business, although the legendary revolvers are still very popular. In fact the Colt Python, discontinued in 1999, recently went back into production (partly I think due to its prominence in the TV show The Walking Dead.)

Quiet Mike
Quiet Mike
  WillyB
February 25, 2022 8:21 pm

Funny you mention the 16 in that context. I could never hit shit with a 16; it was too lightweight, felt like a plastic toy. I carried a 14 my entire tour.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Quiet Mike
February 25, 2022 8:55 pm

For civilian ARs, I’m a fan of Stag Arms. Expensive, but MilSpec build.

PSBindy
PSBindy
  Quiet Mike
February 26, 2022 5:50 am

“…a 16; it was too lightweight, felt like a plastic toy.”

You can tell it’s Mattel, it’s swell!

Bet you remember that. LOL

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  PSBindy
February 26, 2022 8:10 pm

I found my lost StagArms AR to be extremely accurate and very reliable.
A fearsome weapon.
T00 bad the canoe was never stable.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
February 25, 2022 8:45 pm

My grandfather left me this exact .45.
His uncle who fought in WWI left it to him.
The Colt 1917 is the one I lost…

Too bad the canoe tipped over…..

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
February 25, 2022 9:23 pm

When he went belly up, think if he had moved to Charleston. No Hillary.

Check Six
Check Six
February 25, 2022 9:57 pm

Visiting several museums in England about 30 years ago, I saw a revolver that supposedly preceded Sam’s design by a hundred or so years. Sam supposedly viewed this revolver prior to designing his first revolver. Memory is a little foggy, but I think it may have a match-lock type of mechanism for ignition.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  Check Six
February 26, 2022 5:09 am

Speaking of museums, one of the world’s largest privately owned Colt collections is in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Woolaroc is a 3700 acre game preserve established by Frank Phillips of Phillips 66 fame:

The video doesn’t really do justice to the size and scope

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 25, 2022 10:31 pm

That’s a smith & Wesson in the picture though
Chiefs special

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Anonymous
February 25, 2022 10:48 pm

Are you serious?

bucknp
bucknp
  Anonymous
February 26, 2022 12:28 am

I’m gonna go with the Colt Police Positive -.32 Colt New Police, 6″ barrel.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_Police_Positive_Special

Anonymous
Anonymous
  bucknp
February 26, 2022 8:08 am

I have a police positive in 32-20
I’ll have to get it out and take a look.
You could be right.
I also have a chef’s special.

bucknp
bucknp
  Anonymous
February 26, 2022 10:45 am

I’ll stick with Colt Police Positive -.32 Colt New Police, 6″ barrel

Here is a fancier one

With the wood handle there is not Colt emblem like on plastic grip (hard rubber?). I enlarged the Colt in Sam’s pic but never able to read the engraving on the barrel. Also I do not see the Colt emblem typically placed just above the grip toward the hammer.

Here is a S&W that looks very similar but the front sight does not match .

I have a family heirloom in a Colt .32 Auto, Patented Apr. 20, 1897, Dec. 22, 1908. One of the grips was cracked s I out some wooden grips on it. It’s really a fine shooter at close range. the barrel has a bit of pitting in it from being stored in top of a closet by a grandmother for many years. The Colt .32 was sort of known as a backup carried in the boot from my research on the firearm.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  bucknp
February 26, 2022 8:56 am

It’s definitely not Chief’s special
None have an exposed end of the ejection rod as the one above has.

bob in apopka
bob in apopka
February 26, 2022 5:56 am

Two of my favorite carry pistols are colts. The little colt jr. in .22 short, and the .41 short rim fire single shot swing barrel. The 22 is the most accurate mouse gun I’ve ever shot. The .41 is much punch in a tiny package, by time you see it it is too late and it hides well in a speedo. Matters a lot in Florida due to the heat. Hard to hide a larger gun in shorts and a t shirt. (btw I shot that 41 swing barrel once, about a week before the feeling returned to my hand.) I liked it better when Florida had open carry. Back then it was a 3030 Winchester and an old 20 gauge. Kept them in the rear window of my truck until I was pulled over by the law. On the days that my faith in the Lord is strongest I carry a mint 1870’s sharps 4 shot pepper box chambered in .30 sharps short rim fire. The last year that ammo was made was 1919 and mine is much older. Praying and pulling baby, Praying and pulling ! I’ve been robbed 3 times at gun point, was pistol whipped by a 1911, had a .25 raven stuck in my face and the guy pulled the trigger ( miss fired , still have it, still junk ) . Now I carry everywhere.

bucknp
bucknp
  bob in apopka
February 26, 2022 4:32 pm

Voting at my polling place , 2020 general, I “forgot” I had a pistol on my belt, I have it so often, I walked in and “voted” not thinking until after the fact I had violated open and concealed law in Texas.

I had a T-shirt on and a short sleeve shirt over that but the shirt was unbuttoned. Pistol on belt, open shirt, I sort of caught a glance from the woman that was checking voter registration card , but she said nothing. I should have been more responsible but hey, this is rural Texas. Had I tried walking into the county’s justice center reporting for jury duty, alarms everywhere walking through a metal detector. The polling place incident was oversight on my part.

Muscledawg (not to be known as Delusionaldawg)😉
Muscledawg (not to be known as Delusionaldawg)😉
February 26, 2022 7:13 am

I’m sorta surprised that no one here or in the article remembered this quote of Sam Colt’s:
Do not fear any man
no matter what his size.
Just call on me
in time of need,
and I will equalize.

He did more for women’s equal rights than all those feminazis ever did.

bucknp
bucknp

I think all women should carry a handgun. IMO those “purses”” sold as “fads” in promoting carry for women, not such good idea. I’ve known plenty of stories of “purse snatchers”. Just saying , unless the purse with pistol is “locked” to one’s body, just not a good idea IMO. Probably missing the “reason” and justification for such purses.

Three things my dad drilled into my head:

1)

You do not rape women

2) You do not steal ( tell our politicians that regardless which “two party” the duped thinks is the “correct one”)
3) The world owes you nothing ( regardless which side of the dupe one subscribes to)

Women should defend themselves against rape regardless it is a black man, a white man, a yellow man, a brown man, a green man, a purple man, a red man a blue man…all “men” regardless “color” may RAPE women!

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  bucknp
February 26, 2022 8:14 pm

Mrs. CA packs.
Glock 48.
She will never be assaulted without a gunfight.

bucknp
bucknp
  Colorado Artist
February 26, 2022 9:20 pm

If you have access to Tom Grisham’s

Gun Talk

, radio or web, he has good discussions about any number of firearms related subjects. He has callers that reveal any number of assault scenarios and how they escaped death.

One thing Tom talked about some time back was the “secure” feeling people get having 911 emergency services. In a life threatening situation, an intruder in the home, whatever, one could be dead before picking up the phone to call 911. That’s why Tom advocates for self reliance in protecting one’s self or family, not calling the police. And as a matter of fact, police are not actually “obligated” to “protect” anyone. Strange comment perhaps by Tom. He pointed out a statute I cannot recall at the moment.

bucknp
bucknp

Actually, IMO, man or woman, get some exercise and dabble with any number of martial arts, karate, judo, jiujitsu , taiquando, shotokan ( my wife is brown belt)…boxing, whatever. That handgun may not be as accessible as we would like to think and who knows it is snatched from one’s hand.