Didn´t know which heading to put this under,as the Freeman is considered a secondary martial gun,so...i guess here is a place as good as any.
There´s sort of a story to this. I live in Scandinavia and thus i normally look for cap n ball guns on the US side of the atlantic. Gunbroker and so on.
Well. Recently got hit by half severe back problems which for the time being has sort of made me end up in a chair here at home. So..nothing all that much better to do,google myself to death.
As was i didn´t really know all that much of civil war guns,but reading up one thing led to another right,and all of a sudden i was looking for Spillers and what have you not.
Then.
An auction in Britain of all places,and a Freeman Army. Could say set to be part of said auction but..i´m an idiot and overlooked the actual auction.
"To hell with it". Right?
Revisited the auction site and lo n behold! The Freeman didn´t sell! Not only that,not ONE bid! So..i wrote the auctioneer and asked and..sure enough. For sale!
After a lot of mailing back n forth we finally arrived on a deal and the rest as they say is history. Now,seing how close up on x-mas this is i highly doubt that thing there will end up with me before x-mas but be that as it may,as long as the thing shows up.
http://www.horstheld.com/0-Freeman.htmA little something to read on the Freeman revolvers.
For better for worse the gun´s been reblued. Not to the point where they´ve gone crazy sanding it down,more the contrary really. Like..they just cleaned the thing before letting it hit the blueing tank.
Indeed there´s those claiming resemblance to the Rogers&Spencer revolvers and be that as it may (it´s said that Freeman was bought up by R&S as they started making revolvers at the end of the war) it still stands that the Freeman share looks to part both with the R&S as the Remingtons IMO.
Indeed a tapered 7,5" barrel,and i guess we can relate to that too right....
For a lanyard loop i guess?
I guess the reblueing is a few yrs old,but that aside it strikes me as whoever reblued it didn´t really adress the pitting (Ie,sanding the steel down to get rid of the pores) in a brutal manner exactly.
More so it almost strikes me as they basically just cleaned the piece and let it hit the blueing tank?
Hm. Future will tell i guess and in this case i also presume the gun will show up rather quickly seing that it just has to be shipped within the EEC,as i bought it in Great Britain.
Seing the lack of wear n tear at the muzzle i guess this gun has led a rather placid life? Guess so at least,just judging from the pics alone thus far. Most severe pitting as i can see it is at the actual topstrap in itself? No idea as to why?
Yup. Indeed one of the originals. Again. This is a rather scarse gun and as such..left on your own maintaining and servicing the piece. All good as far as i´m concerned as long as it just shows up!
Pricing of these pieces is..at the deep end seing old civil war guns. Yes. I got this,relatively,real cheap and i guess from the fact that the auctioneers didn´t really do their homework.
Well.
Good for me right
This though i guess will be a gun that i bring back to operating and full working and so on standards,shoot a couple of rounds to make it perform as it should,or more to the point KNOWING that it does,and thereafter basically lay on one of the shelves of that safe of mine.
...and take it from there.