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The Karl Pfestorf revolver was made in the late 19th century, specifically around the 1870s. It was produced in Germany and is notable for its unique design. The revolver is often associated with the development of early self-loading mechanisms in firearms.
A ".45 caliber" can be a gun that uses .45 caliber ammunition or it can be a round of that ammunition. There are several specific calibers of small arms ammunition that are all generally called ".45 caliber." They have bullets that are roughly .454 of an inch or 454/1000 fractionally. A famous .45 caliber is the .45 Long Colt, invented in the 1870s and still popular today. It is used in revolvers. Another caliber that is the same diameter but a lot shorter in length is the .45 ACP or .45 automatic Colt pistol. It was made for use in the U.S. military's Model 1911 handgun, and it is still a popular caliber today in that gun and in other handguns. There are some rifles and carbines that use .45 caliber ammo, too.
In the 1870s, the Civil War had ended and there were no more slaves in the U.S.
The person who produced the first simple camera to be sold in the public was George Eastman in the late 1870s. It was sold in 1900 for $1.
The Kingdom of Greece, which operated from 1832-1924, had its capital in Athens during the 1870s.
The 1870s.
in the 1870s
show that become popular in the 1870s is "Vaudeville" .
The National Labor Union formed a political party in the 1870s.
The Panic of 1873 caused an economic depression in the 1870s because banksacross the land closed .
Crop prices went down because of the boom in farm production in the 1870s.
American Handgunner, Nov-Dec, 2004 by Mike Cumpston The ornately figured hard rubber grip engraved with the characteristic Owl Head confirmed it an Iver Johnson Hammerless Safety revolver of the third type. The hinged barrel locked solidly into the frame and the cylinder displayed minimal side play and no end-shake. The bore and chambers were perfect. The gun had been fired very little, if at all. It had the good grace to bc chambered for the still-available .38 Smith and Wesson Cartridge--a pocket pistol standard since the late 1870s. COPYRIGHT 2004 Publishers' Development Corporation COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group Back | Home | Next