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The Birth of the Reproduction Percussion Revolver Industry

Roy L. Oak • January 14, 2024

The Gun That Started It All

The Gun That Started It All

In the beginning there was William B. Edwards. William B. “Bill” Edwards, was the Technical Editor of Guns Magazine, and had visited W. Stokes Kirk, a large clothing, goods and surplus military dealer out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. W. Stokes Kirk was founded by William Stokes Kirk, who started his career with the renowned Bannerman's, and taken over by his son, William Stokes Kirk, Jr., upon the father's death in 1925. It was sometime in the late 1940's or very early 1950's that Bill Edwards visited W. Stokes Kirk. While there he purchased enough of the Civil War surplus spare revolver parts for an Colt M1851 Navy revolver to assemble a "mint condition" '51 Colt Navy Revolver.

According to Dennis Russell, author of "Percussion Colt Revolvers - The Second Generation", the parts for the Colt M1851 Navy revolver that Bill Edwards built came from the W. Stokes Kirk inventory of “Low Number Mismatched” parts that were remnants of the parts purchased from Colts Mfg. After the introduction of the Colt Peacemaker in 1873, Colt sold its inventory of martial Colt Navy 1851 parts to various surplus dealers. In the 1940s, the surplus house of W. Stokes Kirk of Philadelphia assembled and numbered 120 of these “Stokes Kirk” Colt 1851 Navies. Colt manufactured over 130,000 Fourth Model 1851s. Many are still in existence. There were only 120 Stokes Kirk's Navy revolvers.

A Stokes Kirk Navy Revolver

The Colt M1851 Navy revolver that Bill Edwards assembled from those same parts has a cylinder that is numbered 83 and has 100% of the Ormsby roll engraved naval battle scene remaining. All six safety pins and nipples remain virtually untouched. Additionally, the cylinder has a faint index line and carries military inspector marks K and J on opposing shoulders and L on the face between two chambers near the cylinder pin hole. The small round trigger guard and the backstrap are numbered 82 - with the backstrap numeral 2 being slightly damaged. The loading lever is numbered 1715. The only detraction to this revolver is the fact that the hammer will not lock up in the final notch. This revolver has become known as #82 from the serial number on the trigger guard and backstrap.

The Low Number Mismatched #82,

An old theory at one time known as the "1 of 100 Test Gun" theory had these Stokes Kirk assembled revolvers being those that Colt had assembled to prove to the Navy that all the parts were interchangeable, but Nathan Swayze has seemingly disproved this theory and the examples of similar W. Stokes Kirk "Low Number Mismatch" Colt 1851 Navy revolvers can be found in the following firearms reference books:

'51 Colt Navies by Nathan L. Swayze• Page 93, Plata 52.
Book of Colt Firearms by Robert Q. Sutherland & R. L. Wilson. page 131, Plate D

Serial #18 and the known serial numbers of the W.Stokes Kirk parts revolvers

How It All Began


It was nearly a decade later, that this #82 "spare parts revolver" gave Edwards an idea. A few years before the Centennial of the Civil War coming up in 1961, Edwards envisioned having replica '51 Navy Revolvers made in Europe for sale in the U.S. The rest is history!


In the late 1950’s Bill Edwards headed up the Guns Magazine tour of the gunmakers of Europe. They visited dealers and manufacturers in England, Belgium, France and finally Italy. On that "Gun-Nuts Tour of Europe" in the late 1950's, Edwards pitched the idea to every firearms manufacturer they visited in Europe of putting the '51 Navy Revolver back into production. Every manufacturer Edwards proposed the idea to thought Edwards was either joking or he was crazy...after all, they thought....people wouldn't buy percussion revolvers when more modern design cartridge revolvers were available on the market.


Val Forgett was also on that tour with Edwards and as a businessman, thought Edwards proposal of the manufacture and sale of percussion revolvers was actually a good idea. As early as 1957, Forgett was employed as a sales representative for his father’s sheet metal firm, Service Welding Co., in Ridgefield, New Jersey but operated his gun business, Service Armament located in Bogata, New Jersey part-time. When the "Gun Nuts Tour of Europe" got to Brescia, Italy, they toured the Beretta factory. A Beretta employee, by the name of Louie Amadi, was assigned to guide the Americans through the Beretta plant.


Mr. Amadi was selected for that assignment because he spoke excellent English. Originally from Venice, Mr. Amadi had graduated from an Italian university with a mechanical engineering degree. Fresh out of college, he had gone to work for an Italian typewriter company that had a typewriter manufacturing plant in Australia. Mr. Amadi lived and worked in Australia for over a year and consequently became very fluent in English.


It was while guiding the Americans though the Beretta factory that Louie Amadi met Bill Edwards and Val Forgett. It was in a private meeting after the tour was over that Edwards pitched the idea to Mr. Amadi of having replicas of the '51 Navy Revolver manufactured in Brescia. Mr. Amadi loved the idea and agreed to help get the '51 Navy Revolver started in production.


The initial agreement was that Mr. Amadi would act as the agent for Mr. Forgett to get replica '51 Navy revolvers manufactured in Brescia, Italy. For every revolver that Mr. Amadi would ship to Val Forgett in the U.S., Mr. Amadi would receive a $1.00 commission.


After the Guns Magazine tour left Brescia, that original spare parts '51 Navy Revolver #82 that Bill Edwards had assembled was literally smuggled into Italy by a U.S. Army officer and delivered to Louie Amadi to serve as the model to copy. Mr. Amadi found a small company in Brescia by the name of Gregorelli that was willing to tool up to produce the replica revolver and another stage in history is set.


Initially, Bill Edwards had secured an original Colt 1851 Navy revolver from a collector in France that was secretly delivered to an arms dealer in England to be sent to Brescia to use as the pattern for the reproductions. But due to existing gun laws in Italy at the time, the revolver could not be imported into Italy. So Bill Edwards had his model pistol #82 taken into Italy via Germany by a military major stationed in Italy and it was delivered to Gregorelli to begin the manufacture of the prototypes of the M1851 Colt Navy reproductions.


Meanwhile, to make a long story short, Val Forgett, upon returning to the States, founded Navy Arms as a subsidiary of Service Armament to distribute those replica '51 Navy Revolvers in the U.S. and the replica industry was born and became a very large part of the U.S. and Italian gun industry. But the unknown "Hero" of the replica arms story is Louie Amadi, an Italian that had the foresight to become a co-founder of the replica firearms industry. Without Mr. Amadi's efforts, the replica arms industry may have never gotten off the ground.


There is an article in the March 1958 issue of Guns Magazine about that tour on Page 35 of that issue. Note on the first page of the article is a historic picture of Louie Amadi and Bill Edwards! You can download it here:


https://gunsmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/G0358.pdf


In the history of Navy Arms, that small company in Brescia that Louie Amadi found that was willing to tool up to produce those first replica revolvers became known as Gregorelli and Uberti. The revolvers are stamped with “GU” that stands for Gregorelli and Uberti. Gregorelli made the steel parts and Uberti assembled the revolvers. When Aldo Uberti first started into the replica manufacturing business, he did not have a manufacturers license at the time so he had to partner with Gregorelli who was licensed to manufacture.

The #82 Gun That Started It All

Dennis Russell did a photo journal of “The Gun That Started It All” that he passed on to Dr. Davis, which then got passed on to me. It relates the history of the Colt 1851 Navy revolver with Serial #82, from William Edwards assembling the gun at the Colt factory to it being smuggled into Italy for Gregorelli & Uberti to make the prototypes. Dennis Russell now owns this #82 revolver and Dr. Jim Davis had the Prototype #1 revolver in his collection. That revolver became available upon Dr. Davis' passing and is now in the collection of Chad Fisher. 



Photo journal of “The Gun That Started It All”

Replica Percussion Revolver Revolution - The Gun That Started It All
William B. Edwards
Colt 1851 Navy Original Pattern Gun
Val Forgett, Jr.
Photo Plate 4
Photo Plate 5
Photo Plate 7
Photo Plate 8
Photo Plate 9
Photo Plate 10
Photo Plate 11
Photo Plate 12

This revolver started the whole Replica Revolver Industry including Colt's re-entry of their percussion revolvers. Even though I have tried to give some type of history of the beginnings of the reproduction revolver market, I still find new and interesting information around every corner my research takes me. All I can say at this point is, “The more I learn the less I know”.


ENDNOTES:


~ compiled from the notes of Dr. James H Davis, Dennis Russell, Bill Edwards, and Roy L. Oak




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