Yes. Though you need to try to match your gear to the weapon. The .50 RB was a Naval issue handgun, so you would be a sailor. The C96 was issued by very few armys (the largest being China I believe) but many european officers private purchased them, the most well known being a young Winston Churchill.
Before you go running around to find that C96, be aware that because of its design, we allow a c96 user ONE stripper clip, After the first reload (and Staff Officer will require multiple reloads because you engage all targets with your handgun) it is VERY slow going. But great fun I'm told.
Some U.S. officers private-purchased these for use in the Phillipines during the Insurrection. The
father of a colonel who served with my Dad in WWII carried one in the Phills possibly as late as 1930. The father purchased the C96 from von Lengerke & Detmold, probably sometime after 1902 (it is a large-ring hammer model). The gun came to me when I bought it from my Dad's friend's widow. No leather or wooden stock with it, but I've made a reasonable copy of the leather holsters manufactured at the Maestranza de Manilla arsenal, as pictured in Meadows' book. Full flap, butt-rear carry.
Incidentally, my Dad's friend's
grandfather was maimed at 2nd Bull Run, losing both legs below the knees. He went to work in the Ordnance Office in Washington, D.C. On the night Lincoln was shot, James Tanner (the grandfather) was attending the theater
across from Ford's Theater. An announcement was made that Lincoln had been shot, and the other theater was evacuated. Tanner went to his room in a boarding house across the street. The Ordnance Dept. lieutenant with whom Tanner had been attending the theater stayed in the street talking with someone. Someone came running out of the boarding house, went up to the LT., asking if he could or knew someone who could take shorthand. The LT told the person to go to the third floor of the boarding house from which the gent had just come, and get ahold of Jim Tanner. This was done, and Tanner was ushered into the room where Abraham Lincoln lay dying. Everything we know about the Lincoln Death Scene is as a result of Tanner's shorthand, which he later transcribed. The only thing he didn't get was after Sec'y of War Stanton said, "Now he belongs to the ages." after Lincoln died. A chaplain offered a prayer, but Tanner's pencil broke and he didn't have another!
This account has been verified by newspaper articles describing the events.
James Tanner's son, was the one who originally owned the C96.