The holy grail? It is probably the one that got away. The one you sold and now want it back, the one you had the opportunity to own and passed up. The holy grail of guns in in the mind of the individual.
For me it would not really be a firearm it would be a PEDERSON device for my 1918 springfield thats set up for the attachment.
A rod bayonet 1903 would rate right up there too.!!
I would LOVE to have a Gyrojet carbine. Either version of the pistol would be fine as well, but I absolutely drool for the carbine. Plus a machine shop and chemical lab for reloading.....
The Mosin M91 that was used as a proof-of-concept frame for the Pederson device development.
A Colt revolver shotgun is pretty high on my list as well.
For most of us, acquiring guns isn't so much about acquiring rare and uncommon ones, as it is about acquiring guns that we like to shoot or are personally interested in, IMO.
I'm not going to read all the way through this, but so far you are all wrong.
The correct answer is the pistol used by the pathetic and consumptive Gavrilo Princip to assassinate the archduke and his wife.
The one gun that sparked WWI, WWII, and has shaped the continent of Europe ever since. The echo of those shots will reverberate for as long as mankind clings to life on this rock.
the walker is the most wanted of American guns I believe, or the most wanted that are not considered one of a kind. There are however many guns that are worth more. If we are talking personal guns names like bill hickok, james brothers, law men and crooks from the days before the revolution to present. There is also the huge category of movie guns that are heavily collected. The list just goes on.
Hello friends and neighbors // I vote the Ferguson breech loading rifle. //1st breech loader used by military// Invented by Captain Patrick Ferguson (British) at the beginning of American Revolution, he received patent December 1776// I think a French guy invented the action though
Does it come with his favorite dress?
Me, the cased set of 1860 army revolvers, engraved by Colts master engraver Joseph Wolf, presented to the king of Denmark by President Lincolin.
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