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Samuel Colt

 
Who2 Biography: Samuel Colt, Inventor
Samuel Colt
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  • Born: 19 July 1814
  • Birthplace: Hartford, Connecticut
  • Died: 10 January 1862
  • Best Known As: Inventor of the Colt revolver

Samuel Colt created the 19th-century handgun, and the successful gun company, which bore his name. Colt was 16 years old and sailing on a ship to India when he carved a model of a single-barrelled pistol with automatically revolving chambers. The design was 'revolutionary' in more ways than one: it turned handguns from single-shot devices into multi-shot machines that were far more useful and deadly in combat. By the time he was 22, Colt had patented a working revolver in France, England and the United States. He began manufacturing them in an assembly-line factory in New Jersey in 1836. The company failed at first, but war with Mexico and expansion into the west required more guns, and Colt built up a new factory in Connecticut. By the beginning of the Civil War, the Colt revolver was one of the standard small arms of the world. Colt died a rich man, and the company is still around today.

The .45 caliber "Peacemaker," the most famous revolver manufactured by Colt's company, wasn't created until 11 years after his death... Before Colt reopened his factory in 1847, he invented a system of submarine mines and a submarine telegraph cable... Colt's guns inspired an old saying: "God created man, Sam Colt made them equal."

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(born July 19, 1814, Hartford, Conn., U.S. — died Jan. 10, 1862, Hartford) U.S. inventor. He worked in his father's textile factory before going to sea in 1830. On a voyage to India he conceived the idea for his first revolver, which he later patented (1835 – 36). Colt's six-shooters were slow to gain acceptance, and his company in Paterson, N.J., failed in 1842. He invented a naval mine with the first remotely controlled explosive in 1843 and conducted a telegraph business that used the first underwater cable. Soldiers' favourable reports prompted an order for 1,000 pistols during the Mexican War, and Colt resumed manufacture in 1847. Assisted by Eli Whitney, Jr., he advanced the development of interchangeable parts and the assembly line. His firm, based in Hartford, produced the revolvers most widely used in the American Civil War and in the settlement of the West, including the famous Colt .45.

For more information on Samuel Colt, visit Britannica.com.


(1814–1862), inventor and manufacturer

The flamboyant Samuel Colt was best known for his patented revolving pistols, called six‐shooters. After an abortive attempt to manufacture an early version of his pistol, Colt turned to other pursuits—including the development of a submarine battery and a submarine telegraph—before going back to manufacture an improved version of his pistol at the outbreak of the Mexican War (1846–48). Provided with U.S. Army contracts, as well as an expanding market for his product in Europe and the American West, Colt's business thrived to such an extent that in 1854–55 he constructed a large state‐of‐the‐art armory at Hartford, Connecticut. Equipped with the latest tools and machinery, “Coltsville” became a showplace of American industry and the training ground of numerous inventor‐entrepreneurs. During the Civil War, the Colt armory approached mass‐production levels, producing over 400,000 pistols and 85,000 rifles, second only in quantity to the output of the U.S. government–owned Springfield Armory.

By the 1870s, Colt firearms (including the Gatling gun) could be found in virtually every part of the world. Moreover, former Colt workers proved instrumental in transferring the machine‐based technology initially developed in the small‐arms industry to technically related industries making such consumer durables as sewing machines, typewriters, business machines, bicycles, and, eventually, motorcycles and automobiles. Though many gifted individuals contributed to what, by the 1850s, became known as the “American system of manufactures,” Samuel Colt was the system's most vocal spokesman. Few other manufacturers achieved greater prominence or exerted greater influence on the developing American economy during the age of the first Industrial Revolution (c. 1815–76).

Bibliography

  • William B. Edwards, The Story of Colt's Revolver, 1953.
  • R. L. Wilson, Colt, An American Legend, 1985.
  • William Hosley, Colt: The Making of an American Legend, 1996
US Military Dictionary: Samuel Colt
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Colt, Samuel (1814-62) inventor and industrialist, born in Hartford, Connecticut. Colt, who created firearms, pyrotechnics, and explosives, invented the revolver and his manufacturing techniques became known all over the world as the “American system.” He devised a system for electrically detonating mines under hostile ships entering a harbor, but the government wouldn't purchase it because he was so secretive about how it worked. Colt revolvers, much favored by the Texas Rangers, were adopted by governments around the world. Turkey bought 5, 000 of his revolvers and in gratitude Colt topped his factory with an onion dome.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

Biography: Samuel Colt
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The American inventor and manufacturer Samuel Colt (1814-1862) first developed and popularized the multishot pistol, or revolver, which found wide use in the last half of the 19th century, especially in the American West.

Samuel Colt was born in Hartford, Conn., the son of a prosperous cotton and woolen manufacturer. In 1824 his father sent him to work in one of his dyeing and bleaching establishments; Colt attended school at the same time. His behavior in school, however, was such that his father sought to discipline him by sending him on a sea voyage as an ordinary seaman. It was a one-year trip to India and the Orient, and it was apparently on this voyage that young Colt began to work on a revolving pistol. On his return he worked for a year in his father's bleachery and then left to travel on his own. Little is known of his activities for the next few years, but for at least a part of that time he billed himself as "Dr. Coult" and gave popular lectures on chemistry and demonstrated the effects of laughing gas.

Colt continued to work on his idea for a pistol and by 1831 had constructed at least two versions of it. By 1833 he had made both a pistol and a rifle on the principles which he later patented in the United States. Just about this time he wandered off to Europe, where he acquired patents in both France and England. He returned to America in 1836 and received an American patent that year. The primary feature of his pistol was a revolving cartridge cylinder which automatically advanced one chamber when the gun was cocked.

During 1836 Colt built a factory in Paterson, N.J., to make his revolvers, but failing to receive a contract from the government he was unable to produce and sell the gun in quantity. Forced to sell the patent for his revolver, he turned to the problem of submarine warfare, receiving some financial help from the government to build an experimental submarine battery.

In 1846, with the declaration of war against Mexico, the demand for guns rose, and Colt was given a government contract for 1000 of his revolving pistols. Quickly he bought back his patents and opened an armory in New Haven, Conn. This new government patronage, coupled with the growing popularity of the gun in the West (where it was ideally suited to the new kind of horseback warfare being carried out against the Indians) brought Colt financial success at last. His exhibit at the 1851 Crystal Palace international exhibition in London caused widespread comment - for the excellence of his weapons, but most importantly for the example they gave of the mass production of interchangeable parts, which came to be known as the American system of manufactures. In 1855 Colt built his great armory at Hartford, Conn. (the largest private armory of its time), and he lived out his life as a prosperous and respected manufacturer.

Further Reading

A good introduction to Colt's life and works is William B. Edwards, The Story of Colt's Revolver: The Biography of Col. Samuel Colt (1953). There is a vast literature on guns, written for buffs and collectors, much of which contains references to Colt and his pistol.

Additional Sources

Barnard, Henry, Armsmear: the home, the arm, and the armory of Samuel Colt: a memoria, s.l.: s.n., 1976.

Grant, Ellsworth S., The Colt legacy: the Colt Armory in Hartford, 1855-1980, Providence, RI: Mowbray Co., 1982.

Keating, Bern, The flamboyant Mr. Colt and his deadly six-shooter, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1978.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Samuel Colt
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Colt, Samuel, 1814-62, American inventor, b. Hartford, Conn. In 1835-36, he patented a revolving-breech pistol and founded at Paterson, N.J., the Patent Arms Company, which failed in 1842. An order for 1,000 revolvers from the U.S. government in 1847 in the Mexican War made possible the reestablishment of his business. He later built the Colt's Patent Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company factory at Hartford. Colt also invented a submarine battery used in harbor defense and a submarine telegraph cable. His revolving-breech pistol became so popular that the word Colt was sometimes used as a generic term for the revolver.

Bibliography

See biography by W. B. Edwards (1953).

Actor: Samuel Colt
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  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Musical

Biography

Actor Samuel Colt comes from a wealthy, distinguished American family responsible for founding the U.S. Rubber Company and inventing the Colt revolver. He is also the son of star Ethel Barrymore. He appeared in four films, including his mother's last Johnny Trouble. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Samuel Colt
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Samuel Colt (19th century engraving)

Samuel Colt (July 19, 1814January 10, 1862) was an American inventor and industrialist. He was the founder of Colt's Patent Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company (now known as Colt's Manufacturing Company), and is widely credited with popularizing the revolver. Colt's innovative contributions to the weapons industry have been described by arms historian James E. Serven as "events which shaped the destiny of American Firearms."[1]

Contents

Early years

Samuel Colt was born in Hartford, Connecticut to Christopher Colt, a farmer who had moved his family to Hartford when he changed professions and became a businessman, and Sarah Colt née Caldwell, who died before Samuel was seven years old. Christopher Colt was remarried two years later to Olive Sargeant. The Colt family included eight siblings, five boys and three girls. Two of the sisters died in childhood and the other committed suicide later in life, but Samuel's brothers were a significant part of his professional life.

Colt was indentured to a farm in Glastonbury at age 11, where he did chores and attended school. At Glastonbury, he was introduced to the Compendium of Knowledge, a scientific encyclopedia that he preferred to read rather than doing his Bible studies. This encyclopedia contained articles on Robert Fulton and gunpowder, both of which provided motivation and ideas that would influence Colt throughout his life. While reading the Compendium, "he discovered that Robert Fulton and several other inventors had accomplished things deemed impossible—until they were done".[citation needed] Later, after hearing soldiers talk about the success of the double barreled rifle and the impossibility of a gun that could shoot five or six times, Colt "decided he would be an inventor and create the 'impossible' gun".[citation needed]

In 1829, Colt began working in his father’s textile plant in Ware, Massachusetts where he had access to tools, materials, and the factory workers' expertise. Using the ideas and technical knowledge he had acquired earlier from the encyclopedia, Colt built a homemade galvanic cell and used it to explode a gunpowder charge in the waters of Ware Lake. In 1832, Colt's father sent him to sea to learn the seaman's trade. Colt would later say that the concept of the revolver was inspired by his observations of the ship's wheel during his first voyage. He discovered that "regardless of which way the wheel was spun, each spoke always came in direct line with a clutch that could be set to hold it... the revolver was conceived!" On this voyage, Colt made a wooden model of a revolver.[citation needed]

When Colt returned to the United States in 1832, he went back to work for his father, who financed the production of two pistols. The guns turned out to be of poor quality because Christopher Colt believed the idea to be folly and would hire only inexpensive mechanics. One of the guns burst upon firing, and the other would not fire at all. Later, after learning about nitrous oxide (laughing gas) from the factory chemist, Colt took a portable lab on the road and earned a living performing laughing gas demonstrations across the United States and Canada. It was during this time that he made arrangements to begin building guns using proper gunsmiths from Baltimore, Maryland. In 1832, at the age of 18, Colt applied for a patent on his revolver and declared that he would "be back soon with a model".[citation needed]

Gunsmithing

Reproduction of an engraving taken from an oil painting displayed at Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT.

In 1835, Samuel Colt traveled to England, following in the footsteps of Elisha Collier, a Bostonian who had patented a revolving flintlock. Despite the reluctance of English officials to issue the patent, no fault could be found with the gun and he was issued his first patent (Number 6909). He then traveled to France to promote his invention, and there he heard about the emerging conflict between the United States and France. Colt wanted to serve his country, so he returned home. Upon his return, however, he learned that England had mediated the conflict and that there would be no fighting, so he set up a factory for the manufacture of his firearms in Paterson, New Jersey. Shortly after his return to the United States, Colt applied for a patent for a "revolving gun", and he was granted the patent on 25 February, 1836 (later numbered 9430X).[2] This instrument and patent No. 1304, dated August 29, 1836, protected the basic principles of his revolving-breach loading, folding trigger firearm named the Paterson Pistol.[3][4]

Colt never claimed to have invented the revolver, as his design was merely a more practical adaption of Collier's revolving flintlock, which was patented in England and achieved great popularity there.[5] He did, however, greatly contribute to the use of interchangeable parts. "Unhappy with high cost of hand made guns, and with the knowledge that some parts of guns were currently being made by machine, Colt wanted all the parts on every Colt gun to be interchangeable and made by machine. His goal was the assembly line."[citation needed] This is shown clearly in a letter that Samuel Colt wrote to his father in which he said, "The first workman would receive two or three of the most important parts…and would affix these and pass them on to the next who add a part and pass the growing article on to another who would do the same, and so on until the complete arm is put together."[citation needed]

It was this first "practical revolver and the first practical repeating firearm,"[citation needed] made possible by converging percussion technology, that would be the genesis of what would later germinate into an industrial and cultural legacy and a priceless contribution to the development of war technology -- ironically personified in the name of one of his later revolving innovations, the Peacemaker. Colt quickly formed a corporation of New York and New Jersey venture capitalists in April 1836. Through the political connections of the subscribers, the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company of Paterson, New Jersey, was chartered by the New Jersey legislature on March 5, 1837. Colt was given a commission for each gun sold in exchange for his share of patent rights, and stipulated the return of the rights if the company disbanded.

Early problems and failures

Because the company’s owners were reluctant to fund the new machinery to make the interchangeable parts, Colt went back on the road to raise money. Demonstrating his gun to people in general stores did not work, so with a loan from a cousin he went to Washington D.C. and demonstrated it to President Andrew Jackson. Jackson approved of the gun and wrote Colt a note saying so. With that approval, Colt got a bill through Congress endorsing a demonstration for the military, but no appropriation for them to purchase the weapon. A promising order from the state of South Carolina for fifty to seventy-five pistols was canceled when the company did not produce them quickly enough.

One recurring problem Colt had in selling his revolvers was that "it was not possible to change the provisions of the Militia Act of 1808. Any arms purchased under the Militia Act had to be those in the current service to the United States."[citation needed] In other words, state militias could not officially allocate funds towards the purchase of weapons not also used by the United States military.

When Martin Van Buren assumed the Presidency in 1837, the ensuing economic crash almost ruined Colt's company. The company was saved by the war against the Seminoles in Florida which provided the first sale of Colt's revolvers and his new revolving muskets. The soldiers in Florida loved the new weapon, but "the unusual hammerless design, sixty years ahead of its time... led to difficulty training men used to exposed-hammer guns and many curious soldiers took the locks apart. This resulted in breakage of parts, stripped screw heads, and jammed actions."[citation needed] Colt soon reworked his design to leave the firing hammer exposed, but problems continued and in late 1843, after numerous setbacks including loss of payment for the Florida pistols, the Paterson, New Jersey plant closed.

The two Sams

Colt did not refrain long from manufacturing. Soon after the failure of his former company, while he was marketing the underwater electrical detonators that he had invented, Colt met Samuel Morse. They became friends and they both lobbied the U.S. government for funds. Colt's waterproof cable was valuable when Morse ran telegraph lines under lakes and rivers, and bays, and especially for attempts to lay a telegraph line across the entire Atlantic Ocean.

When tensions with Great Britain prompted Congress to appropriate funds for Colt's project toward the end of 1841, he demonstrated his underwater mines to the U.S. government. In 1842 he used the device to destroy a moving vessel to the satisfaction of the navy and President John Tyler. However, opposition from John Quincy Adams, who was serving as a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts's 8th congressional district, and who personally disliked Colt, scuttled the project. After this setback, Colt concentrated on manufacturing his waterproof telegraph cable, believing the business would boom alongside Morse’s invention. He began promoting the telegraph companies so he could create a wider market for his cable, for which he was to be paid $50 per mile.

The return of the revolver

Samuel Hamilton Walker (1817-1847)

In 1847, Captain Samuel Walker and the Texas Rangers, who had acquired some of the first Colt revolvers produced during the Seminole War, ordered an additional 1,000 revolvers to use in the Mexican-American War. The large order allowed Colt to re-establish his firearm business. Because he no longer owned a firearm factory, or even a model of a firearm, Colt hired Eli Whitney Blake, who was established in the arms business, to make his guns. Colt and Captain Walker drew up a new improved model from which Whitney produced the first thousand-piece order. The company then received an order for a thousand more; Colt took a share of the profits at $10 per pistol for both orders. He later built the Colt's Patent Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company factory at Hartford, Connecticut. His revolving-breech pistol became so popular that the word "Colt" was sometimes used as a generic term for the revolver. The California gold rush and western expansion made the firearm business boom so much that Colt had to expand the Hartford factory repeatedly.

During this period Colt received an extension on his patent because he did not collect on it in the early years. When someone[who?] infringed on the patent, Colt sued and the court ordered that Colt receive royalties on each gun that had been sold by the rival company. This caused the rival to go out of business. With a virtual monopoly, Colt began to sell his pistols in Europe, where demand was high due to tense international relations. By telling each nation that the others were buying Colt's pistols, Colt was able to get large orders from many countries who feared falling behind in the arms race[citation needed].

Later years

Colt later purchased a large tract of land beside the Connecticut River, where he built a larger factory called the Colt Armory, a manor that he called Armsmear, and employee housing. He established a ten-hour day for employees, installed washing stations in the factory, mandated a one-hour lunch break, and built the Charter Oak Hall, a club where employees could enjoy games, newspapers, and discussion rooms. On June 5, 1856 Colt married Elizabeth Jarvis, the daughter of the Reverend William Jarvis, who lived just downriver from Hartford.

At the outbreak of the US Civil War, Colt-who had called himself "Colonel"-was actually commissioned a Colonel by the State of Connecticut on May 16, 1861 in the "1st Regiment Colts Revolving Rifles of Connecticut" armed with the Colt revolving rifle. However the unit never took the field and Colt was discharged on June 20, 1861. Samuel Colt died in Hartford in 1862 and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery. At the time of his death, Colt's estate, which he left to his wife and son, was estimated to be valued at around $15,000,000. His professional responsibilities were turned over to his brother-in-law, Richard Jarvis

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Serven, J. E.; Metzger, C. (1946). Paterson Pistols, First of the Famous Repeating Firearms patented and promoted by Sam'l Colt. Foundation Press. 
  2. ^ Colt, S. (February 25, 1836). "Revolving Gun (9430X)" (html or *.pdf). United States Patent Office Database. United States Patent Office; Google. http://www.google.com/patents?id=Jy0qAAAAEBAJ&dq=Samuel+Colt. Retrieved September 2, 2008. 
  3. ^ Serven, J. E.; C. Metzger (1946). Paterson Pistols, First of the Famous Repeating Firearms patented and promoted by Sam'l Colt. Santa Ana, CA: Foundation Press. p. 5. 
  4. ^ "United States Utility Patent 1304, Improvement in fire-arms and in the apparatus used therewith". United States Patent Office; Google. August 1839. http://www.google.com/patents?id=bNI_AAAAEBAJ&dq=Samuel+Colt. Retrieved September 2, 2008. 
  5. ^ Bowman, H.W. (1963). Lucian Cary. ed (Abridged Edition Fawcett Book 553). Antique Guns (4th printing ed.). Greenwich, Connecticut: Fawcett Publications. p. 94. 

References

  • J. E., Serven; C. Metzger (1946). Paterson Pistols. Santa Ana, CA: Foundation Press. 
  • J. E., Serven; C. Metzger (1946). Colt Percussion Pistols. Santa Ana, CA: Foundation Press. 
  • J. E., Serven; C. Metzger (1946). Colt Cartridge Pistols. Santa Ana, CA: Foundation Press. 
  • J. E., Serven; C. Metzger (1946). Colt Dragoon Pistols. Santa Ana, CA: Foundation Press. 
  • Yankee Arms Maker (1st ed.). United States of America: Harper and Brothers Publishers. 1935. 
  • Kelner, William L. (June 1969). On Samuel Colt and the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company, New Jersey: A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School Farleigh Dickinson University. 
  • Grant, Ellsworth S. (1982). The Colt Legacy. Providence, RI: Mowbray Company. 

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