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Griswold & Gunnison: The Best Confederate Revolver Makers 

Forgotten Weapons
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Griswold and Gunnison were rather unique among Confederate revolver manufacturers for their ability to actually create a reliable and high quality product and produce it on a regular and predictable schedule. So many of the Confederate revolvers were made by starry-eyed novices, but Griswold & Gunnison ran a proper professional manufacturing operation, and as a result were able to produce as many guns as all other Confederate revolver makers combined.
The Griswold & Gunnison gun was basically a copy of the Colt 3rd model Dragoon, with a 7 1/2 inch .36 caliber barrel, 6-shot cylinder, and brass frame. They have a subtle but recognizable slight rear tilt to the grips, and are virtually all identical, or as close to it as can be expected for hand-fitted guns from the 1860s. In addition, the guns were made with twisted iron cylinders (instead of steel, which was too difficult to procure), and the trusted pattern of the material is often visible on the finished product. The one variation is that at about serial number 1500, the barrel shank changed from rounded to octagonal.
Arvin Gunnison was gunsmith who had been making Colt type revolver in New Orleans before the war, who partnered with Samuel Griswold for the endeavor. Griswold was a very successful entrepreneur who had built Griswoldville on 4,000 acres of land south of Macon, Georgia. There he had a wide variety of businesses, including grist and saw mills, a candle factory, a foundry, and a cotton gin factory. With the assistance of Gunnison, he converted the cotton gin factory into a revolver factory in 1862, and produced about 100 revolvers per month until November of 1864. On the 22nd of that month, Griswoldville was overrun by Union forces and destroyed.
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Комментарии : 435   
@williamyaughn3644
@williamyaughn3644 Год назад
My family lived in Griswoldville when I was a boy. Several times I went with some older cousins to scratch around the ruins of the Pistol facrory. We uncovered a bout a dozen unfinished barrels. My uncles farm was the site of the last pitched battle of Union and Confederate armies. We used to pick up minnie balls in the fields after Spring planting after a rain. They were sitting up on little dirt pedestals, just waiting to be plucked up. My Uncles farm house was built in 1830 and still is occupied.
@wvbygraceofgod5508
@wvbygraceofgod5508 Год назад
Man what a experience that must have been growing up. I’d love to have experience like that growing up, being a kid in the south picking up G&G barrels and round balls. Most of us just got to pick black berries and night crawlers to go fishing.
@vojnovicvojnovic1104
@vojnovicvojnovic1104 Год назад
You should pick up some barrels
@dobypilgrim6160
@dobypilgrim6160 7 лет назад
My uncle found one of these in a country store in the mountains of northeast Tennessee in about 1971 or 1972. He paid $150 for it. Before the Internet, and before Flayderman's Guide, it was the real Wild West for antique gun collecting.
@lynneaschliesleder152
@lynneaschliesleder152 6 лет назад
"Daymn it Elam, the man wasn't finished speaking his last words yet!"
@edwardteach1855
@edwardteach1855 4 года назад
Yeah he was
@diegoserrato4016
@diegoserrato4016 4 года назад
I love how Bohannon says "damn it, Elam" as if scolding a child for spilling cereal on the floor.
@JackFroster
@JackFroster 7 лет назад
With a name like Gunnison you kinda have to be in the arms business.
@seanjoseph8637
@seanjoseph8637 7 лет назад
Or a US Marine...
@DonHavjuan
@DonHavjuan 6 лет назад
Second generation is a Son Of A Gunnison
@Wipa4
@Wipa4 5 лет назад
TheJackFroster I guess being named Griswold makes you a blacksmith by default
@abntemplar82
@abntemplar82 3 года назад
or the railroad...lol
@borisdorofeev5602
@borisdorofeev5602 3 года назад
I was about to comment that with a name like Gunnison if you're not making guns for a living then idk what your doing with your life
@Courier-Six
@Courier-Six 4 года назад
"That griswold was one damn unreliable piece" - General Grant "Always worked when I needed it" - Cullen Bohannon
@Snubrevolver
@Snubrevolver 4 года назад
@Trainwreck727 That huge belly laugh when Grant told him the town wouldn't be named after Durant was priceless
@MrBlackbeard4
@MrBlackbeard4 3 года назад
I was expecting a Hell on wheels reference here, thank you sir
@Bengiemon275
@Bengiemon275 3 года назад
@@Covey7342 His gun he used in the opening episode and the few after actually was a griswold, he lost it in one episode and bought a remington.
@Nyx_2142
@Nyx_2142 2 года назад
@@Covey7342 He used several different ones throughout the show
@kennethhamby9811
@kennethhamby9811 Год назад
Cullen lost the griswold then used a Remington’58.
@lukedealberdi3713
@lukedealberdi3713 7 лет назад
The grip angle on these look fantastic from a target shooting point of view.
@thomasvagenasjr5623
@thomasvagenasjr5623 Год назад
I own a Uberti manufactured replica marketed by Navy Arms. I was in high school, about 17 years old in 1973 and bought it for $50 from a Ogden, Ut gun shop called “Williamson’s Sports Inn”. The gun was called the “Army Model 60”. Uberti still makes high quality replicas under its own name. Although Griswold and Gunnison didn’t manufacture examples in .44 caliber, like mine, I still value it, even though it probably is not period correct, even heard that the brass frames did not hold up as well as the steel as found on the 1860 Colt Army and replicas. Mine is still going strong even though I’ve fired several thousand rounds through it. I have shot it in competition shoots, including mountain man reenactments where percussion revolver matches were allowed. I typically use 30 grains of fff with a .451 round ball. The gun actually looks antique with the bluing pretty much worn off. It’s still better made than the recent replicas made by Pietta. I have a Pietta 1860 army and the Pietta action is not as smooth as my old Uberti.
@sloanchampion85
@sloanchampion85 5 лет назад
The Southern boys didn't do to bad with what they had
@maxgun8562
@maxgun8562 7 лет назад
could be nice a video/series of videos about how guns were made in the XIX century, focused in methods, materials, qualities and finishes with examples of each one
@notpulverman9660
@notpulverman9660 7 лет назад
I read that as "the ninety-tenth century."
@maxgun8562
@maxgun8562 7 лет назад
ok thanks.... thats because my lenguage is spanish, I love old guns and also I try to improve my english with this YT channel :D ian have a clean pronunciation
@maus92
@maus92 6 лет назад
XIX= 19
@KroM234
@KroM234 5 лет назад
My 2c, pikes were still in use in most modern navies up to the late 19th century as a very usefull melee weapon along with cutlasses and axes.
@zlatkovujevic7348
@zlatkovujevic7348 7 лет назад
When Ian said "Griswold" all my memories come back from Chevy Chase movie series :)
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 6 лет назад
zlatko vujevic Strange, the first thing I thought of was the cast iron pots and pans. The company was around during the civil war and it was based in Pennsylvania. I bet Sam Griswold was from the same family of cast iron skillet makers.
@jets1230
@jets1230 7 лет назад
I live here. Town is gone but we call the area still by the name. We have a gun range named after the pistol bit other than that its Twiggs county ga dry branch area
@coltonregal1797
@coltonregal1797 4 года назад
Sounds like a nice place to live.
@butchcassidy3373
@butchcassidy3373 3 года назад
The plant was by the tracks where the sign is.
@greghester7640
@greghester7640 3 года назад
@@butchcassidy3373 factory is not close to sign....was moved years ago to throw off relic hunters
@jets1230
@jets1230 3 года назад
@@jeannieheard1465 i live basically in grisword area twiggs county area. Iys about 10 miles east of the indian mounds macon area east on hwy 57. Nothing here but a plaque in honor of it and a empty field where they had the last battle heading to savannah i believe.
@jaymassengill3340
@jaymassengill3340 7 лет назад
Sterling Archer approves the manufacturing and use of pikes.
@drewm389
@drewm389 7 лет назад
In Macon, just looked at one of these today in a local pawn shop. Awesome
@tartarsauce2601
@tartarsauce2601 4 года назад
"What are you smilin' at?" "You empty" *Click* "Any last words?" "Go to hell you black-" *BANG*
@anthonyhayes1267
@anthonyhayes1267 3 года назад
Toole was the Dodge Viper of characters. Once they fixed everything wrong with him they got rid of him
@ROBSHOTZ
@ROBSHOTZ 5 лет назад
7th Virginia Regt was raised in Northern Virginia and participated in Pickett's Charge.
@hodah
@hodah 6 лет назад
I'm not 'into' guns. But I am into history, the 'Wild West' and 'Hell on Wheels'. Your videos are all very interesting and educational. Thank you.
@TroopperFoFo
@TroopperFoFo 7 лет назад
2:24 I would hope his pikes worked fine. I cant stand when mine malfunctions.
@Tjalve70
@Tjalve70 5 лет назад
If your pikes malfunction, it's because you're holding them in the wrong end.
@balderfrey20
@balderfrey20 5 лет назад
@@Tjalve70 or you roll a natural 1
@FyremaelGlittersparkle
@FyremaelGlittersparkle 4 года назад
@@balderfrey20 "You attack the guard in blue standing in front of you with your pike. He parries it with his bayonet. Unfortunately, the front end dips and snags the ground in front of you, snapping off the head. Turns out, the iron was not of good quality. You now have disadvantage on your attacks with the weapon for the rest of the encounter, and it will be treated as an improvised weapon."
@balderfrey20
@balderfrey20 4 года назад
@@FyremaelGlittersparkle yes exactly 🤓
@artwerksDallas
@artwerksDallas 3 года назад
Very interesting story. Seems like a serious collectible today
@crowdog357
@crowdog357 7 лет назад
Pikes were used by both sides for Sergeants in formation in marching very early war
@crowdog357
@crowdog357 7 лет назад
Michael Eversberg II ???
@jackdundon2261
@jackdundon2261 3 года назад
DAMN, I wish he had, had a colt to contrast with these!
@od1452
@od1452 3 года назад
Yes. ! Pikes were one of the first weapons the Confederacy bought . Weird but true.
@russbilzing5348
@russbilzing5348 3 года назад
Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't #2198 have a burst barrel?
@tjo4087
@tjo4087 5 лет назад
Pikes were made for yaking out the horses of the cavalry.
@carterdreyer2655
@carterdreyer2655 3 года назад
Cullen Bohannon likes this video
@Ballenxj
@Ballenxj 3 года назад
Thumb up for the interesting history of Griswold and Gunnison.
@richardanderson2742
@richardanderson2742 3 года назад
I wouldn’t think the use of malleable iron was that uncommon in the firearms industry during the Civil War. Enfield (RSAF) didn’t switch to steel barrels until the purpose built (as opposed to conversions) Snider rifles in 1866.
@pimpompoom93726
@pimpompoom93726 2 года назад
I think the iron in this case is twisted wrought iron, not malleable iron. I don't believe the process for creating malleable iron existed at the time of the US Civil War.
@tommyvinson6
@tommyvinson6 7 лет назад
Very interesting video. Thank you.
@mtodd4723
@mtodd4723 7 лет назад
Good video , Thank you for sharing .
@bjrnthecrow3506
@bjrnthecrow3506 7 лет назад
Damned Yankees always burnin our buildins to the ground
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 6 лет назад
Ain't that the truth!
@kevins2301
@kevins2301 5 лет назад
*whispers* "Sherrrrmannn"
@undrgrnd734
@undrgrnd734 5 лет назад
@@kevins2301 if you look in the mirror and say sherman 12 times you'll hear union gunfire and then fire crackling shortly after
@codemiesterbeats
@codemiesterbeats 5 лет назад
Honestly I had this thought pass through my mind lol
@gungriffen
@gungriffen 4 года назад
I'm from Texas and live in Georgia. Told my Wife and Cousin I prefer my Confederate states Uncharred. Most pissed off I think I've ever seen those two.
@TotalRookie_LV
@TotalRookie_LV 7 лет назад
Pikes? Perhaps for cavalry? After all, they were used in that role as late as 1920s as far as I'm aware judging by pictures of Russian civil war era.
@obviouspseudonym9345
@obviouspseudonym9345 2 года назад
@@jeannieheard1465 I think he meant pikes in an anti-cavalry role. Sorta the same thing pikes and other polearms were used for in the middle ages and Renaissance.
@vescovinator
@vescovinator 3 года назад
If your name is Gunnison and you can't make a good firearm you are legally obligated to change your name.
@Mike23443
@Mike23443 Год назад
Ian McCullen Bohannon
@Klarinet2011
@Klarinet2011 4 года назад
You know what’s weird about the pikes? Stonewall Jackson thought they’d work on the battlefield. It might have come from his request; he died before CSA fielded them.
@ShellShock11C
@ShellShock11C 4 года назад
Been looking for a repro of one of these forever, but everyone is always sold out!!!!
@andrewroy6376
@andrewroy6376 7 лет назад
But did Griswald have moose mugs?
@Punkledunk
@Punkledunk 7 лет назад
Macon, Georgia huh? The same Macon that Lee from the Telltale Walking Dead game?
@k.s.3748
@k.s.3748 2 года назад
Literally a son of a Gunn! HAHA
@christophergkassel6611
@christophergkassel6611 4 года назад
The pikes were used against union calvary charges..
@icarusairways6139
@icarusairways6139 11 месяцев назад
I sleep on a Griswold and Gunnison.
@GustavMeyrink
@GustavMeyrink 7 лет назад
Just over a hundred years later one of Griswolds descendant made successful movies about his family holidays.
@Charok1
@Charok1 7 лет назад
Hearling Griswald makes me think of Clark Griswald, which then makes me think of the Fletch Lives movie where he goes to the south. haha
@greghester7640
@greghester7640 4 года назад
I was born and raised in Griswoldville.....I'd love to own one of these pistols ...
@peteraustin9057
@peteraustin9057 5 лет назад
A literal big iron
@williammurray8060
@williammurray8060 4 года назад
I've heard of a revolver factory in Star, NC. Anyone else?
@fdg5112
@fdg5112 7 лет назад
I'm not a metallurgist; Why twisted iron for the cylinder? I would think that twisting would make the iron weaker?
@ChishioAme
@ChishioAme 7 лет назад
It depends. I know more about the making of swords than guns, so take this with a grain of salt, but when it comes to swords, there's a process known as "twist core" when pattern welding; basically, one or more iron bars would be twisted around one another before being forged to shape (and often having a harder material welded around it for the edge, but that's neither here nor there). What it accomplished there was to spread out the impurities in the iron, so that rather than having enough weaknesses accumulating in a single spot that could be catastrophic, they were spread about, resulting in something that was not particularly strong overall, but much less prone to failure. I imagine it would do the same for a revolver's cylinder, allowing it to better handle the pressure generated by the powder charge.
@mo_rhec6293
@mo_rhec6293 5 лет назад
ive always wanted one but there so expensive
@Grizz0220
@Grizz0220 Год назад
What are these worth?
@MrSven3000
@MrSven3000 7 лет назад
hm .... so the confederacy was able to produce about 7000 revolvers in total .... so, how did they get the rest ? i mean they surely had a cavalry of like 100.000 troppers, what did the other 93.000 use ?
@baneofbanes
@baneofbanes 5 лет назад
Whatever they could get their hands on.
@dobypilgrim6160
@dobypilgrim6160 4 года назад
Surrendering Yankees were always a good source of supply.
@davidbritton1802
@davidbritton1802 6 лет назад
AWSOME. VIDEO-!!!!! DJB@PA......U.S.A...!!!!
@exploatores
@exploatores 7 лет назад
I wounder if colt paid the Union army to burn down the town to stop the company form making anymore copys.
@Ensign_Cthulhu
@Ensign_Cthulhu 7 лет назад
I don't think the Union army needed any encouragement to deprive the South of its best revolver maker.
@RocksChosenWarrior3
@RocksChosenWarrior3 6 лет назад
Col. Colt actually died a few months before G&G started making revolvers. maybe his widow. "We did it, Sam we burned out the patent infringers"
@kalashnikovdevil
@kalashnikovdevil 6 лет назад
Sherman in particular didn't need any encouragement to light just about anything in the South in general and Georgia in particular on fire.
@imachynn
@imachynn 4 года назад
Why do they all look like Colts?
@davidnicholas7516
@davidnicholas7516 3 года назад
The Confederates actually considered using pikes as combat weapons at the beginning of the war. Believe it or not, several biographies of Stonewall Jackson mention that he thought this would be a good idea; he recommended that the Confederate government buy a bunch. The largest issue here was the availability of both guns and ammunition and the materials to make them; when that cleared up largely due to the Confederates importing guns, and capturing a bunch from the Yankees (in addition to whatever they made themselves) they put the pikes in warehouses and didn't really use them.
@demonprinces17
@demonprinces17 3 года назад
Pikes were in pre war inventory, the arsenal John brown took was full of pikes, some early war confederate cavalry were issued pikes from state arsenals along with single shot pistols
@brandonobaza8610
@brandonobaza8610 7 лет назад
Iron? Not steel?
@ForgottenWeapons
@ForgottenWeapons 7 лет назад
Correct.
@dr.johnpaladinshow9747
@dr.johnpaladinshow9747 5 лет назад
$40 G's+ Yikes !!
@craigthescott5074
@craigthescott5074 2 года назад
Basically it looks like a crude rip off of the Colt Dragoon.
@BogeyTheBear
@BogeyTheBear Год назад
Or a Colt Navy that someone decided to finish off properly by turning the barrel round rather than settling for the half-hearted look of an octagonal barrel.
@alexandersmall7380
@alexandersmall7380 4 года назад
Southern guy: Look what I can do! The entirety of the Northern War Effort: And that’s special. . . How?
@privatezim3637
@privatezim3637 7 лет назад
if I could offer some constructive criticism, the in and out of focus panning shot is distracting and unpleasant. If you instead cut together a variety of in focus shots that would be much better.
@Jesses001
@Jesses001 7 лет назад
Pikes, as in sharp sticks. I think just about anyone could make those, even in the south, ha. That is okay though, as they clearly upgraded production to these rather nice revolvers. I mean they are not really anything that special, other then the fact that they were made in the south, which is kind of a big deal at the time. As you said, consistent and reliable is NOT how southern production firearms normally went.
@PatrickLink
@PatrickLink 7 лет назад
Gee, it's too bad relying on chattel slavery for a dustructive export agriculture didn't lead to a reliable industrial base.
@BBaumBBaum
@BBaumBBaum 7 лет назад
Weird to omit any mention of the griswoldville slaves that manufactured the guns.
@alexmoore1506
@alexmoore1506 7 лет назад
Alex Holmes I don't think it'd be that hard to imagine. Hope you're not trying insinuate anything about Ian.
@MikeDCWeld
@MikeDCWeld 7 лет назад
Alex Holmes not sure how exactly that's relevant to the topic at hand.
@blackstone1a
@blackstone1a 7 лет назад
Alex Holmes it's the Confederacy, it's implied that slaves were used at some point
@moiseman
@moiseman 7 лет назад
Did they trust slaves with guns? That's weird.
@MikeDCWeld
@MikeDCWeld 7 лет назад
moiseman the people building the guns wouldn't have had access to powder, bullets, or caps. So the only risk is they might try to smuggle one out occasionally, but that's easy enough to stop.
@lv-gamer2568
@lv-gamer2568 6 лет назад
-Do you not believe in a higher power? Yes, sir. I wear it on my hip. /Cullen Bohannon/
@lamolambda8349
@lamolambda8349 5 лет назад
Bo Hhhhhhannon I love how the swede would say his name
@MM-qi5mk
@MM-qi5mk 5 лет назад
LOVE IT
@cipherthedemonlord8057
@cipherthedemonlord8057 4 года назад
I'm re-watching Hell on Wheels as we speak. Don't know why they used an 1860 brass frame Army instead of getting an 1851 brass frame. It's close enough to the real thing.
@stevenbaker8184
@stevenbaker8184 4 года назад
@@cipherthedemonlord8057 yeah it's the one that keeps getting mentioned. The one that the colonel claims to have had his fingers shot off.
@stevenbaker8184
@stevenbaker8184 4 года назад
@@lamolambda8349 "I'm Norwegian, I'm from Norway." Thor Gunderson. "The Swede"
@capandball
@capandball 7 лет назад
Once I'd like to compare one to an original Colt percussion revolver.
@coltonregal1797
@coltonregal1797 4 года назад
It's unfortunate that they command machine gun prices. I'd love to see that video.
@jamescanson3352
@jamescanson3352 4 года назад
@@coltonregal1797 i could get 2 original transferable M1917 machine guns for the price of a single original Griswold
@awe5543
@awe5543 3 года назад
If there is one person who deserve to get his hand on these and do comparisons, you would be the one sir!
@МихайлоРостов
@МихайлоРостов 3 года назад
It would be great to at least see the internals of a Griswold & Gunnison revolver. I've searched for years and have yet to actually find any. I don't think there are any online, only exterior pictures. I've read that the tooling they used to build the revolvers at Griswold & Gunnison was far more simple/crude than what would have been used by Colt at the time. One example I read was that they hollowed out the yellow bronze/brass frames using just a hammer, chisel, and hand files rather than using a mill as Colt did. Just chipping away at the brass with a chisel to form the opening inside of the frame. Also I read the exterior of the barrels & cylinders weren't turned down on lathes but rather done by hand on big grinding wheels. Whether or not that's true I don't know. Regardless I'd love to see what one looks like inside.
@abntemplar82
@abntemplar82 3 года назад
and or compare both the the Remington.
@driley4381
@driley4381 3 года назад
These guns were made less than 100 yards from where I currently sit and type this comment. I wish some kind of photographs or drawings of the original Griswoldville existed. It's hard to look down this rail line through the thick pine trees and imagine what used to be. I can't wait to get my hands on one of these guns one day and bring it back to it's home.
@butchcassidy3373
@butchcassidy3373 3 года назад
I grew up in bleckley county and love history. Would have loved to have seen that area in action back in the day myself.
@Yosemite-George-61
@Yosemite-George-61 Год назад
Just found the video, I've moved to France, used to live in Macon, went by one. If I ever come back I should look you up, we'll have a beer on me. I shoot black powder here and I have a G&G replica, wrote this just before my first time with it: MY FIRST TIME (Homage to Griswoldville) My Griswold & Gunninson gleams in the night The oil lamp bathes us with her soft warm light While the smoke of the pipe billows and churns And the glass of bourbon waits for its turn Tomorrow is the shooting and I'm a bit uptight As I'm not so sure I can win this fight I think I went a bit over my head When I accepted to shoot 13 bullets of lead I roamed the fields where this gun was made Now I'm so far away in distance and age So I'll do it for me and I'll do it for them I will do my best when they call my name We'll see tomorrow when they let go with their guns If I cry like a baby or I fight like a man "It's all in your head" they said at the stand When you punch holes on paper using just one hand Cheers!
@aidanacebo9529
@aidanacebo9529 11 месяцев назад
it's been two years, have you brought one home yet?
@gungriffen
@gungriffen 7 лет назад
Sad to say I only know the name Griswold because of Hell on Wheels.
@gungriffen
@gungriffen 7 лет назад
Justshooting Yeah it was.
@SlavicCelery
@SlavicCelery 7 лет назад
Funny my introduction to the name Griswold was from the Vacation series of movies.
@cheekibreeki921
@cheekibreeki921 6 лет назад
Great show though the revolver the guy carried was an 1860 Army with brass frames while Griswold did not make copies of the 1860 Army of that sort
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 6 лет назад
Cheeki Breeki I might be mistaken but I believe there were several references throughout the show's duration of the Griswold having an octagonal barrel. That and the brass frame is what made them easily identifiable.
@cheekibreeki921
@cheekibreeki921 6 лет назад
@@wizardofahhhs759 Yes but the Griswold revolvers were copies of Colt's 1851 Navy revolver. Yes it did have the octagonal barrel and the brass frame but on the Hell On Wheels show, the revolver the protagonist carries is actually Colt's 1860 Army modified to have a brass frame because finding an actual Griswold & Gunnison 1851 Navy is extremely difficult from what I understand, since only a handful were made before the Union Army burned down the factory during Sherman's campaign. Not saying you are wrong but I'm just pointing out an extremely minor detail
@trr94001
@trr94001 7 лет назад
I remember seeing a Confederate pike at the (sadly now defunct) Higgins Armory armor museum in Worcester Massachusetts. Maybe it was one of Griswold’s.
@georgem7965
@georgem7965 4 года назад
Probably 30+ years ago Atlanta Cutlery was selling Confederate pike heads. I don't recall the cost but I wish that I had picked one up.
@theodurnayne3874
@theodurnayne3874 Год назад
I went there when i was a kid. Wish i could go back and understand what I'm looking at better
@gretah3969
@gretah3969 7 лет назад
Fun Fact: Samuel Griswold was a member of the famous Griswold family. He was related to John Augusta Griswold, who created Albany and Rensselaer Iron and Steel Works, and personally financed the building of the USS Monitor; and to Mathew Griswold who founded Griswold Manufacturing that made Griswold cast iron cookware.
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 6 лет назад
Sean Heihn I wondered about this because they were both out of Pennsylvania but I could never find anything definitive. Thanks for the info.
@jameshalljedidrivertrainer7207
I wonder if he was also an ancestor to the great Clark Griswold 🤔
@garettrobichaux
@garettrobichaux 7 лет назад
why the hell didn't he name it 'grisworld' instead of griswoldville?
@knifetoucher
@knifetoucher 7 лет назад
"ville" denotes that it was a town. 4k acres = town size.
@jets1230
@jets1230 7 лет назад
Garett Robichaux I live here now. Twiggs Jones county Georgia
@TheRogueWolf
@TheRogueWolf 7 лет назад
That's just how effective Disney's lawyers are- issuing an injunction a hundred and twenty years BEFORE Disney World even came into being.
@MRBetz
@MRBetz 7 лет назад
Griswoldville was actually a major industrial center in the south prior to the Civil War. Unfortunately, after Sherman burnt the place to the ground during his "March to the Sea", it never recovered
@jets1230
@jets1230 7 лет назад
M.R. Betz not nothing here now but a shooting range and a gas station. Macon up the road
@wizardofahhhs759
@wizardofahhhs759 6 лет назад
The character Bohannan on Hell on Wheels carried a Griswold, the pistol was almost as much a character in the show as any of the actors.
@doraran5158
@doraran5158 7 лет назад
So older gun dealers speak of artificially aged Italian copies circulated by 'little old ladies' at gun shows claiming gun 'had been in family', selling it for a fraction of a real Griswold, but many times more that value of copy. As Ian mentioned, odd grip angle is usual give away. Caveat Emptor!
@drmoss_ca
@drmoss_ca 5 лет назад
In the late 1960's my father took a break from making live steam locomotive models and made a Griswold and Grier. Full working order, except for the fact he didn't drill the barrel right through (he lived in the UK at the time and that would have been illegal). I remember going with him to the railway works in Swindon - he knew some folks there willing to do a little work on the side - to get the gunmetal castings made for the frame. I still have it and it has aged very authentically over the last fifty years!
@coltonregal1797
@coltonregal1797 4 года назад
There's a video of another guy on RU-vid who made a Colt navy type replica that way. It's actually pretty amazing. If I had the time, money, and the first clue of where to start I'd love to try making one of my own.
@evocati6523
@evocati6523 2 года назад
How sad to have a law that you can't make a black powder revolver. Here they don't even count as "firearms" and you can have them shipped to your house with no 4473
@Surprise_Inspection
@Surprise_Inspection 7 месяцев назад
​@@evocati6523The poor should not be allowed to challenge the wealthy. The easiest way to make sure of this, is to stop the poorer 99% of the population, from owing the same weapons that your loyal soldiers do.
@geGNOME
@geGNOME 7 лет назад
Bohannon!
@SnowyEvans
@SnowyEvans 7 лет назад
That show has added both a Yellow Boy and a 1858 Remington to my wish list
@Rekkoff
@Rekkoff 5 лет назад
@@SnowyEvans I got a Pietta 1858 with a drop in conversion. So worth it. .>
@A-a724
@A-a724 5 лет назад
he used a colt 1860 after the first episode in season one and uses a Remington 1858 new army from season 2 on.
@jwhiskey242
@jwhiskey242 5 лет назад
Wasnt a G & G.
@coastdweller
@coastdweller 5 лет назад
Still a battlefield monument in Griswoldville. Other than that not much..... neat area you can find lots of fossils (shark teeth, shells , etc.) Used to be under water millions of years ago.
@johnoneil9188
@johnoneil9188 7 лет назад
One of these days I got to actually look up who James D. Julia was.
@mgkleym
@mgkleym 7 лет назад
IS not was. He currently owns/runs the auction house. Son of the guy who started it. jamesdjulia.com/about-us/
@jkjrkarmia514
@jkjrkarmia514 6 лет назад
brother of Raul Julia.....showtime!
@lizardb8694
@lizardb8694 7 лет назад
Anson Mount-ness intensifies. Has anyone actually counted how many people He shot dead with this revolver during the run of the entire tv series?
@jakewayrewa5201
@jakewayrewa5201 6 лет назад
With his brass-framed Colt 1860. The last few years of the series he used a Remington.
@Geriatric_Gaming
@Geriatric_Gaming Год назад
Fun Fact: The great great grandson of Samuel Griswold is Clark Griswold who lives in Chicago Illinois. A few films have been made about his colorful life and family usually centered around Christmastime.
@pimpompoom93726
@pimpompoom93726 8 месяцев назад
That is is, Eddy. That it is.
@troy9477
@troy9477 7 лет назад
Interesting. Nice guns. I knew the company story wouldn't end well as soon as i heard it was in GA. Too bad. Sounds like they did well with what they had (iron instead of steel). Great video as always. Thank you
@rustyteague8574
@rustyteague8574 4 года назад
that's about enuff , my necks a turnin red listening to all this Confederate bashing, massive factories against a couple guys with a bench vise and a few drill bits n files......
@larryteager6382
@larryteager6382 3 года назад
Agreed!
@jcorbett9620
@jcorbett9620 7 лет назад
I know that the CSA were perennially short of firearms, but if these guys were the most successful and made more than all the other makers combined - yet only produced 3,700 pistols, where did the CSA get the pistols to supply the thousands of troops fielded? Were the individual soldiers expected to bring their own pistols? Or is it simply they bought them all from other countries and re-used captured weapons from the Union?
@crashandburnbirner
@crashandburnbirner 7 лет назад
J Corbett Well your average man jack didn't get a revolver, they were officers guns.
@prechabahnglai103
@prechabahnglai103 7 лет назад
Soldiers sidearms were knifes.
@jarkoer
@jarkoer 7 лет назад
Yes. However they could get arms, they would. Foreign sources, captured weapons, home-grown industry, or BYOG (bring your own gun). There was even a CSA unit that was armed only with shotguns... because that's all they had. I'm very sure there were even a few flintlocks here and there. Pistols were more for officers and cavalry, though.
@dominicvucic8654
@dominicvucic8654 3 года назад
Pistols were mostly given to the cavalry
@pimpompoom93726
@pimpompoom93726 8 месяцев назад
Confederacy relied on imports from England and France as well as captured weaponry, in addition to the 'home grown' models. After the first few battles of the US Civil War scavenging dropped Union weapons was not exactly difficult, the first few defeats resulted in a lot of Union troops tossing their weapons and kit and running like hell. Confederate troops usually had enough small arms to supply their troops, where they ran into problems was artillery-they could cast Bronze Napoleons at foundries in the South, but making the longer range artillery rifles like the Parrot's was beyond them. They had to capture those if they wanted them.
@stewknoles4790
@stewknoles4790 7 лет назад
I own a modern clone. Great BP pistol. Nice to see real gunmetal instead of the cheap brass they use today.
@coltonregal1797
@coltonregal1797 4 года назад
It's not mentioned in this video, but I've heard in other places that the frames of these revolvers are known for being rose colored due to shortages of zinc in the South. If anything, it's most likely that the modern Pietta brass is better quality.
@althesmith
@althesmith 3 года назад
@@coltonregal1797 Some would've no doubt had tin bronze. Nothing wrong with that, hell they cast cannon barrels from it.
@-Zevin-
@-Zevin- 2 года назад
@@coltonregal1797 Yup. Brass gets a bad wrap because of the really cheap poor quality brass framed Italian revolvers back in the late 1960s and 1970s, Companies like Pietta have improved drastically since then. You still hear from the old timers to "never buy brass, it's cheap and the frame will stretch" sure it IS cheaper than steel, but the difference isn't massive as long as you aren't throwing cylinder capping hot loads, stick to 25grains and under (still produces similar power to a modern .38special +P) . It is incredibly likely that the quality control and strength of modern Italian revolvers is much greater than civil war examples, to be fair though allot has changed in metallurgy, manufacture and general quality since then. We forget that even genuine Colts and Remingtons in the early days exploded, bent, and were plagued with all types of quality control issues, but that's just how it was, everyone had issues back then, even the best quality manufactures in the 1860s would pale in comparison to budget stuff today. Just was the nature of the early industrial revolution. If anything it's a sign that if anyone is interested in black powder firearms, now is a fantastic time to experience them and re-live some of that history with even safer more refined modern reproductions, and because they are not regulated as firearms in the United States you cut all the red tape, meaning cheaper prices for high quality guns.
@Yosemite-George-61
@Yosemite-George-61 Год назад
I own the Pietta replica. I lived in Macon, GA for many years, the Southern folks accepted me and game a job event that I was not "From 'round here". I've bought the G&G because of that. I'm about to enter a competition in France in 2 weeks. The Pietta has a round trigger guard and is not angled like the real one, feels lighter up front because the barrel is round, other than that is a Navy. Ah... I have shot over 600 rounds with no problem, however, I use 15 grains and .375 balls, good enough for hole punching. Have fun y'all!
@TheKalilover
@TheKalilover 7 лет назад
John E. Brown, the Governor of Georgia ordered them in 1862. They would later be issued to the equivalent of a Home Guard. I saw a display at the J.M. Davis museum in Claremore OK. You should really go there.
@coltonregal1797
@coltonregal1797 4 года назад
Are you talking about the pikes or the revolvers? I'd like to do more research on this topic.
@mitchlovesgames7281
@mitchlovesgames7281 4 года назад
Captain Bezaliel Garland Brown, Jr. entered Confederate service in June 1861 as a member of Virginia’s Seventh Infantry, Holcomb Guards, Company I, Terry’s Brigade, Pickett’s Division, Longstreet’s Corps, commanded by Brig. Gen. W. R. Terry. The 1860 census shows Brown as a single 24-year-old farmer. He was promoted to the rank of captain the following year, commander of the company. He was wounded in the left leg and taken prisoner at the Battle of Gettysburg July 3, 1863. He is described as 6’2” tall with a light complexion, blue eyes and brown hair. He was incarcerated at Baltimore February 9, 1864, and transferred to Ft. Delaware June 23, 1864, where he was admitted to the post hospital. He was held at Morris Island under fire from his own guns. He was released May 30, 1865, by order of General Grant, but is shown as having died in 1865-details not available but likely from complications of his wounds.
@nathanaelgodson3994
@nathanaelgodson3994 4 года назад
Why do i think about a House coverd in Christmas Lights when i hear the Name "Grisworld"?
@austincollier14
@austincollier14 4 года назад
Very cool video, thanks! I love learning about the ACW and especially appreciate this video because I own a reproduction Griswald by Pietta (it was made in the 1960’s or 70’s) . A worthless piece to most, is a very sentimental, priceless piece to me. Only because it was purchased new by my great grandfather. It’s one of two pistols and 7 long guns I inherited after his passing.
@rocketman8476
@rocketman8476 3 года назад
I would love a replica of this revolver, preferably converted to a modern, smokeless caliber. It looks so beautiful! I love wooden handles/stocks on guns. Modern guns just don’t have the same aesthetic
@Immafraid
@Immafraid 2 года назад
Why remake a cap and ball revolver into a centerfire smokeless revolver? That defeats the whole idea.
@rocketman8476
@rocketman8476 2 года назад
@@Immafraid because it’s my fantasy and that’s the way I’d prefer without the slow AF reload time and who would want to use a ball and cap over a modern day round
@BogeyTheBear
@BogeyTheBear 2 года назад
There are cartridge conversions of the 1851 Navy, but every conversion out there has specific instructions _not_ to install them into a brass frame gun.
@mr.puddles5246
@mr.puddles5246 11 месяцев назад
It'd have to be a 380 acp in a gunmetal (modern Henry brass) frame to be safe.
@baneofbanes
@baneofbanes 4 месяца назад
It wouldn’t be a replica then.
@northlight546
@northlight546 4 года назад
I'd love to have one. Samuel Griswold was my wife's 3rd great grandfather.
@wildman510
@wildman510 3 года назад
Oh really? There's another guy claiming he's related to him on his mother's side. Nice try.
@dominicvucic8654
@dominicvucic8654 3 года назад
It still kills me that the south had some men go into shiloh with pikes
@demonprinces17
@demonprinces17 3 года назад
Use what you got
@christophershoemaker1109
@christophershoemaker1109 6 лет назад
Griswoldville is about ten miles ENE of downtown Macon, not south of Macon. There is nothing left of the site except several historical markers and the collapsed remnants of a mid-1900s school. Griswoldville Battlefield, a Georgia historic site, is nearby.
@killzoneisa
@killzoneisa 7 лет назад
I recall this gun from Hell on Wheels.
@codysides7683
@codysides7683 7 лет назад
I just found out I'm related to this man on my mothers side! Thanks for what you do!
@skeltonslay8er781
@skeltonslay8er781 3 года назад
Samuel griswold is such a badass name
@thedolt9215
@thedolt9215 3 года назад
Unless I miss my guess Ian, even the first colt single actions in the early 1870s had iron frames. I think iron frames were the rule for a long time before steel castings and/or forgings were used.
@63DW89A
@63DW89A Год назад
Iron, once casehardened, is as tough and hard as the finest steel. The only problem with casehardened iron is that it cannot be tempered as can high carbon steel. But for use in a revolver frame, hammer or loading lever, casehardened iron, being surface hard with a soft interior for toughness without being brittle is exactly what is needed.
@pimpompoom93726
@pimpompoom93726 8 месяцев назад
Correct, they used wrought iron castings for pistol frames. Steel started being used more in the late 1870's and 1880's.
@tacticalministries3508
@tacticalministries3508 5 лет назад
Bless you for sharing this knowledge gun Jesus
@eddyk4515
@eddyk4515 3 года назад
"Iv been gone that long...Mr Ferguson tell them who I am" "Tell'em yourself" 🤣🤣
@prechabahnglai103
@prechabahnglai103 7 лет назад
General Lee and some others ordered thousands of pike heads made to combat early war weapon shortages. Many men early on were without standardized weapons in the calibre government can provide ammunition for. It was a temporary fix intend to be disgard after confederate guns manufacturing caught up. Stonewall Jackson sieze of Harperferry's rifle replicating tooling greatly aid in this effort.
@reaper8526
@reaper8526 5 лет назад
I am not a confederate but those guys made good six Shooter
@FiveStringCommando
@FiveStringCommando 7 лет назад
Awesome video! Love seeing Confederate arms and hearing the history.
@JerryEricsson
@JerryEricsson Год назад
Very cool. I want one. I can't afford one! Ah well, I want a lot of things, I can't afford any of them. I am at the point in my life where I am selling off a lot of old things that I used to want, and used to afford but now they are just dust collectors. For example I still have 3 pistols from my old days as a gun-show dealer and collector. My collection used to number over 100 firearms but were sold off to afford groceries after the Fed sued me into bankruptcy following an accident that eft me injured for life and workers Comp cut me off leaving me without an income. My house was insured with a federal loan that was accelerated and I got a very large bill due on demand. Thank God mom had enough funds to finance an old shack in my home town where I now live. Ah well all water under the bridge. Perhaps I will take a drive out in the country and burn up a box of .45 ammo, I have 2 .45s and one .22 handguns that I kept because of sentimental reasons, one I carried for the last dozen years on the PD before the accident, the other is a M1911A1 that is like the gun I carried on my hip in Vietnam when I was humping a rather large radio in the boonies. The .22 is a copy of the pistol my father carried on his trap line when we lived on the old homestead, he used it to kill the critters who were caught in his trap so he could sell the fur to add to our farm income.
@ronaldomello4463
@ronaldomello4463 Год назад
Sem tradução ou legenda não dá para entender legal. Estamos no Brasil.
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