New UBERTI MODEL P 45LC 4.75” MAN WITH NO NAME
“New PIETTA FRONTIER GUNFIGHTER 45LC 4.75” NICKEL – CHECKERED FAUX IVORY” has been added to your cart. View cart
New UBERTI MODEL P 45LC 4.75” MAN WITH NO NAME
$913.61 Original price was: $913.61.$768.00Current price is: $768.00.
UBERTI MODEL P 45LC 4.75” MAN WITH NO NAME
Cimarron F.A. Co. introduced the Man With No Name 1851 Conversion in .38 Special. The conversion remains one of the most ordered guns in Cimarron’s line. Continuing in the tradition of the spaghetti western, Cimarron brings you the Man With No Name Single Action by Uberti. An accurate copy of the gun used by our nameless hero in the classic Western movies “Fist Full Of Dollars” & “For A Few Dollars More”. This gun features a sterling silver snake on the right side of the walnut grip, a color case hardened frame and a blued barrel and cylinder.
Category: Western Revolvers
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New UBERTI 1873 SINGLE ACTION ARMY OLD MODEL w/4 CLICKS – COLOR CASE HARDENED/BLUED – 45LC 4.75″
New Uberti 1873 Single Action Army Old Model w/4 Clicks - Color Case Hardened/Blued - 4.75" 45LC
Uberti Old Model DUAL CYLINDER Peacemaker 4.75" 45LC with 4 clicks t bring the hammer to full cock. Color case-hardened frame/blued cylinder and barrel. Considered the most authentic and highest quality reproduction of the 1873 Colt Single Action Army. This Peacemaker revolver is an exacting replica down to the same weight, size, performance and feel including NO transfer bar. This pistol is ready for Cowboy Fast Draw, Cowboy Mounted Shooting or the Single Action Shooting Society right out of the box or just an incredibly fun trip to the range.
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New UBERTI S&W 1875 SCHOFIELD No. 3 TOP BREAK – 7″ BARREL 45LC – NICKEL PLATED FORGED STEEL FRAME w/TWO-PIECE WALNUT GRIPS
New Uberti S&W 1875 Schofield No. 3 Top Break - 7" Barrel 45LC - Nickel Plated Forged Steel Frame w/Two-Piece Walnut Grips
Designed by Major George Schofield to be operated with one hand while on horseback, a break-open pistol was ideal for mounted soldiers in the U.S. Cavalry. Shooters could easily eject all six spent cartridges and reload while on horseback. The top break pistol also proved useful to the likes of Jesse James and Wild Bill Hickok. The Schofield barrel latch opens by pulling it back with the thumb and includes the rear sight notch. This 7" barreled model features a forged steel nickel plated frame, nickeled finish on parts and a two-piece walnut grip with cartouche. Chambered in the venerable 45LC.
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New GWII PIETTA “The SHOOTIST” 1873 SINGLE ACTION ARMY 45LC 4.75″ – ENGRAVED/BLUED – ULTRA IVORY GRIPS
GWII PIETTA "The SHOOTIST" 1873 SINGLE ACTION ARMY 45LC 4.75" - ENGRAVED/BLUED - ULTRA IVORY GRIPS
Re-named in 2019, EMF pays tribute to the original Great Western guns used by John Wayne in his last motion picture, "The Shootist." Several years before he was cast as John Bernard Books in the "The Shootist", Great Western Arms Company presented John Wayne with the guns. The Duke decided these exquisite revolvers suited his character: a professional gunfighter dying of cancer.
With the beautiful laser-engraved all-blued barrel and cylinder, the one-piece ultra ivory grips offer a contrast, accentuating the engraving even more. Just as aged ivory changes color over time, the white grips on the GWII "The Shootist" vary in coloration from a stark white to an off white.
https://youtu.be/kIRKnR5xvHo?si=P-wfA6fbAAH0w6Lc
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New UBERTI MODEL P ARIZONA RANGER™ COMPETITION SINGLE ACTION ARMY – COLOR CASE HARDENED/BLUED – 45LC 4.75″ – CFDA, CAS, CMSA or SASS RIGHT OUT OF THE BOX – CHECKERED GRIPS
New Uberti Model P Arizona Ranger™ Competition Single Action Army - Color Case Hardened/Blued - 45LC 4.75" - Checkered Grips
Cimarron's Arizona Ranger™ Competition SA is the best “competition ready” model in their extensive line of classic peacemaker-style revolvers. Located in Fredericksburg, Texas, Cimarron Firearms, with this exacting reproduction of this incredible single action revolver pays its respects to a group of little-known, but historically significant frontiersmen, known as the Arizona Rangers, as immortalized in the classic song “Big Iron” by Marty Robbins. Cimarron’s new Model P revolver honors the 107 men who initially served in the Arizona Territorial Rangers from 1901 to 1909.
The Arizona Ranger Competition Single Action is a fast-acting, competition-style revolver that incorporates a finely-tuned U.S. action, a competition hammer and a trigger/bolt spring that is lighter and smoother while offering a crisp, no-creep trigger pull. The sights are a wide-square notch rear and constant-width front sight, perfect for quick target acquisition, and repeat shots. Hand-checkered, slim European walnut grips and a blued finish add to the beauty of this performance-built pistol. Upon inspection you will find “Arizona Ranger” roll engraved on the .45 Long Colt barrel in an old-style font. MSRP is a generous $842.01.
The little-known Arizona Rangers were created in 1901 by the Arizona Territorial Governor, Nathan Oaks Murphy, as a result of increased violence, outlaws, cattle rustling and train robberies occurring during that time period. Pressure from ranchers and mine owners, and the newly established railroad barons, on the territorial government increased to form a law force modeled on the highly successful Texas Rangers.
The new force was comprised of fourteen men, one captain, one sergeant and twelve privates. They were a well trained, mounted, undercover group. Besides capturing and killing several outlaws and cattle rustlers, the expanding forces also assisted in labor disputes, including the Morenci copper mine dispute, in which 25 of 26 Rangers were present at the location and successfully averted any violence while reaching a settlement. Another labor dispute at a mine in Cananea, Mexico turned into a riot resulting in several deaths. A volunteer posse was led by then Arizona Ranger Captain Thomas Rynning, who entered Mexico against the orders of the governor of the Arizona Territory, but with the blessing of the governor of Sonora, Mexico. The Ranger-led posse, along with the Mexican rurales were able to put down the riot, but not without several deaths.
In 1909, under increasing pressure from county sheriffs and attorneys, the Arizona Rangers were disbanded. In 1957, a few surviving Arizona Rangers re-established the force and were officially recognized by the State of Arizona in 2002. Today’s Arizona Rangers are an unpaid, volunteer, non-profit, law enforcement and assistance civilian auxiliary who work with and at the request of federal, state and local law enforcement in the State of Arizona.