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Extremely Rare TW Radcliffe - Columbia SC Retailer Marked Fully Cased 4th Model Tranter 80-Bore Revolver

Extremely Rare TW Radcliffe - Columbia SC Retailer Marked Fully Cased 4th Model Tranter 80-Bore Revolver

  • Product Code: FHG-2362-SOLD
  • Availability: Out Of Stock
  • $1.00


This is an extremely rare, southern retailer marked example of a Tranter’s Patent 4th Model, Single Trigger Percussion Revolver  in VERY FINE+ condition. William Tranter was born in 1816 and died in 1890 and during his working life he was one of the more prominent Gun, Rifle & Pistol Makers in the Birmingham gun trade. He went into business for himself circa 1840, after completing his apprenticeship with Hollis Brothers & Co, which he had begun in 1830. Tranter continued in the trade until 1885, just five years before his death. After his decade of work learning the gun trade at Hollis Bros & Co (later Hollis & Sheath), in 1840 Tranter bought the established gun making business of Robert Dugard at 29 ½ Whitehall Street. Over the next decade he worked for himself and in joint ventures with his old employers John & Isaac Hollis as well as with Isaac Sheath. By 1850 he had located his primary business at 50 Loveday Street, where he was listed as having “shops, sheds, steam machinery, yard & premises”. Tranter secured his first British patent related to firearms in October of 1849 when he registered a “pepperbox mechanism and lever catch for pistol locks”. In January 1853 he registered British Patent Number 212 (1853) for a pair of “self-cocking” pistol mechanisms and a safety mechanism. In December of the same year, he registered designs for a double-action revolver mechanism, lubricated bullets and wadding, and a breech loading mechanism, all of which were covered by Patent Number 2921 (1853). In August of 1856 he registered the designs for a “double trigger revolver mechanism”, along with several other designs, all of which were covered by British Patent Number 1913 (1856). Tranter continued patenting firearm designs as late as 1887, after he had actually left the gun trade. 

 

Tranter’s most successful series of arms were his “self-cocking” revolvers, which were initially introduced in 1853. The earliest revolvers utilized Robert Adams’ patent for a solid, one-piece frame and barrel that were machined from a single forging. Tranter’s initial production run of revolvers included both Model 1851 Patent Adams style lock works, and Tranter's own patented lock works. The original “Tranter” type revolvers, known to collectors as 1st Model Tranters had no provision for a fixed loading lever. The lever swiveled on a stud that projected from the left side of the frame but had no provision to retain the lever when it was mounted on the revolver. The lever was intended to be stored in a case or carried in the pocket. Most of these guns were manufactured on Adams Patent frames and have Adams Patent serial numbers, really patent tracking numbers to pay royalties to Adams. These guns were produced in a serial number range assigned to Tranter by Adams, and these numbers are followed by a Y-suffix. The 2nd Model Tranters also had a pin on the frame that allowed the attachment of a removable loading lever, but the pin had a small projection that allowed the lever to remain attached to the gun unless a keyway in the lever was aligned with the stud projection to remove it. The later example of these guns, manufactured after about 1856, have Tranter Patent serial numbers and end with a T-suffix. These guns not only include Tranter Patent lock works, but also a newly improved version of the Adams solid frame, which was patented by Tranter in 1856. At this point Tranter revolvers rarely have an Adams serial number or a “Y” suffix. The 3rd Model Tranters had a more permanently attached loading lever, which was secured by a screw. The 3rdModels appear to have all been produced in the T suffix Tranter serial number range. All of these first three models were based on his “double-trigger” system (initially referred to as his “hesitating mechanism” on the early production guns), which utilized a second “trigger” under the trigger guard to rotate the cylinder and cock the hammer. The trigger inside the triggerguard was used to trip the sear and release the hammer. 

 

The 4th Model Tranter revolvers, which were introduced in 1856 and are all in the Tranter T-suffix serial number series, used a single trigger. They had what would today be called a conventional “double action” lock work. All of these revolver patterns were produced in a variety of calibers, with 54-Bore (.442) “Holster Size” and 120-Bore (.338) “Pocket Size” revolvers being the most commonly encountered calibers and frame sizes, and the mid-sized 80-Bore (.387) “Belt Size” being less often encountered. Some of the guns were also produced in the exceptionally large and powerful 36 and 38 bore sizes, which were larger versions of the holster size guns, and were about .50 caliber! Barrel lengths varied as well, with the larger caliber arms typically having longer barrels. All of the guns were 5-shot percussion revolvers, and typically featured checkered one-piece walnut grips, although smooth varnished wood grips and other grip materials are known to have been used on a special order basis. The Tranter patent revolver was the primary competitor with the Adams and Beaumont-Adams patent revolvers in England and was also exported widely. 

 

Pre-Civil War Tranter revolvers are known with US retailer marks, indicating that his designs were at least somewhat successful in the United States. The majority of the retailer marked guns are from the south, with the largest majority of them being marked by New Orleans retailers. Based upon extant examples, the firm of Hyde & Goodrich (later Thomas, Griswold & Co) appears to have been the primary importer of Tranter Patent revolvers into the southern United States in the decade prior to the American Civil War. Most of these retailer-marked guns were sold cased with accessories, although some guns were certainly sold without the expensive casings and accouterments. During the course of the Civil War, it appears that the importation of Tranter revolvers was somewhat limited, at least in terms of Confederate central government purchases. However, period advertisements in the south and extant examples with southern provenance make it clear that the guns were imported by blockade runners as speculative items for sale in the south. Confederate luminaries such as General John Hunt Morgan (3rd Model #3758T), General J.E.B. Stuart (4th Model #8673T), General John Magruder (5th Model – unknown number – see Albaugh) and Colonel Dabney H. Maury (3rd Model #7993T), who served on the staff of General Earl Van Dorn, all owned documented Tranter revolvers.  The famous “Pratt Roll”, which lists the revolvers in the possession of Lt. Julian Pratt’s squad of troopers in Company H of the 18th Virginia Cavalry, lists two Tranter revolvers, with the serial numbers 15,465 and 15,476. The squad roll is from July of 1864. This indicates that Tranter revolvers in the mid 15,XXX serial number range were in use by southern forces, and in the field by that time. 

 

Other Tranter revolvers with southern provenance include guns which are retailer marked by T.W. Radcliffe of Columbia, SC. Additionally, a March 10, 1863 advertisement in the Richmond Times Dispatch for H. E. Nichols of Columbia, SC read in part:

 

Fine English Revolvers.

Just received from England, six Tranter’s fine revolving pistols, 80 and 120 bore.

Price $220 each.

 

All of this evidence indicates that at least some of the Tranter revolvers produced during, as well as prior to the Civil War, saw Confederate use. At least one Tranter that I previously owned was most likely imported by Schuyler, Hartley & Graham of New York. The gun was an engraved, nickel-plated 4th Model 54-Bore revolver with relief-carved ivory grips. The gun was serial number 13619T. Dating Tranter revolvers based upon their serial numbers is somewhat problematic, as frames were sometime produced in advance and the guns completed at a later date. What we do know is that the “T” serial number suffix came into use around serial number 2200, sometime between 1854 and 1856. We also know that Tranter produced revolvers using Adams’ patent serial numbers and a “Y” suffix from about 1853 through about 1856. These guns appear in several serial number ranges, as assigned by Adams, including the 2X,XXX Y-suffix range. From extant examples of Tranter’s with specific dates associated with them, it appears that those Tranter revolvers with serial numbers under about 20,000 (and possibly some of the early guns in the 20,XXX range) with T suffixes were produced prior to the end of 1865

 

This particular 4th Model Tranter Revolver is in about VERY FINE condition and is one of the extremely scarce pistols that is retailer marked by T.W. Radcliffe of Columbia, South Carolina. An identical configuration Radcliffe retailer marked 4th Model Tranter is pictured and discussed on page 245 of our book The English Connection. That gun is serial number 12368T and this one is number 12371T, only 3 numbers away. There is no doubt that these two revolvers were part of the same shipment of guns to Radcliffe. This revolver is also cased in a typical Tranter factory casing with a full set of Tranter accessories.

 

Although sources vary, it appears that Thomas W Radcliffe was born on March 8, 1812 in Richmond, VA. At some point he moved to Columbia, SC where he established himself as jeweler, watchmaker and seller of “fancy goods”, not unlike another Tranter retailing firm in New Orleans, Hyde & Goodrich. Radcliffe had initially been a partner in Radcliffe & Guignard in Columbia from 1858, and then went into business for himself. He briefly partnered in 1861 with William Glaze (of Palmetto Armory fame) during 1861 as Glaze & Radcliffe, and then returned to working on his own through the end of 1865. According to the 1860 Census, Radcliffe was running quite the successful operation. He was listed as owning real estate valued at $6,000 and having a personal estate valued at $25,000, which was an astronomical sum during the period. According to www.measuringworth.com $25,000 in 1860 would be equivalent to $793,000 in purchasing power today but would also have the equivalent economic status in 2019 as a person with a net worth of $11.7 million dollars! These figures help explain how Mr. Radcliffe could maintain a household that included 10 other people including his wife and 9 children between the ages of 2 and 21. An advertisement for Radcliffe’s establishment in the Columbia Daily Phoenix from the period reads in part:

 

T. W. RADCLIFFE

At The

SIGN OF THE DRUM

Offers every article in his line, viz: WATCHES, JEWELRY, GUNS, PISTOLS, POWDER, SHOT, CAPS, CARTRIDGES for Smith’s & Wesson’s Pistols; KNIVES, FORKS, SPOONS; Spectacle – to suit all ages: Gold pens – the best ever brought to this place; Fishing Tackle, new and fresh – selected by myself; Hair and Tooth Brushes, Combs, Walking Canes and everything usually kept in our line of business.

 

An invoice dated August 8, 1861 indicates that the Confederate States of America purchased 26 Double Barrel Guns @ $30 ea. - $780 from Radcliffe’s business.

 

Although he was 48 at the time, Radcliffe did not let his age dissuade his patriotism and a week after the date on the above invoice, he volunteered for service in the 15th Alabama Volunteer Infantry. On September 5, 1861 he was mustered in as Captain of Company A of that regiment. Special Order #227 dated October 22, 1861 promoted him to Major, with the promotion to date from October 19. Apparently, army life, possibly combined with his age did not suit Radcliffe and sometime during November he became ill and went home on leave, from which location he resigned his commission and left the army. He then returned to his regular business At The Sign Of The Drum (Corner of Richardson & Plain Streets)offering “Clocks, Watches & Jewelry, Silver & Plated ware, Military & Fancy Goods, Guns, Pistols, &c, &c.” and a wide assortment of items for sale to the residents of Columbia and throughout South Carolina. It is possible that the brief time during 1861 that he was in the army was the same period that the partnership of Glaze & Radcliffe existed. 

 

Offered here is a very desirable, fully cased, southern retailer marked 4th Model Tranter Revolver. It is one of the less common mid-sized 80-Bore revolvers (about .387 caliber). These 80 bore guns were particularly popular in the south as they represented the English equivalent of the equally popular Colt Model 1851 Navy revolver with its similar caliber. The topstrap of the revolver is neatly engraved in a single line:

 

T.W. RADCLIFFE, COLUMBIA, S.C.

 

The left side of the frame is crisply marked in a two-line cartouche: W. TRANTER’S / PATENT, along the lower edge, between the front of the triggerguard and the loading lever mounting screw. The pistol is serial numbered No 12371T on the right side of the frame, with the same serial number found engraved on the case hardened cylinder as well, within a small engraved oval flourish. Although Tranter’s are certainly very difficult to date based upon serial number, and no reliable factory records exist to confirm production or shipment dates, I firmly believe that this gun was manufactured circa 1861. The 12,000 range is the last of the T-suffix serial number ranges in which southern retailer marked Tranters regularly appear, suggesting that by the end of the 12,000 range regular importation of these guns had been severely curtailed. Most of the New Orleans retailer marked Tranters appear in the 8,XXX to 11,XXX T-suffix range and are most likely from the 1856-1860 production period, with the occasional example found in the earlier Y-suffix range circa 1853-1856. As noted above, the revolver is in VERY FINE condition. The gun is in extremely crisp condition with sharp edges and lines throughout. The gun retains about 85%+ of its original blued finish, with some minor flaking and finish loss from wear along the sharp edges of the topstrap, along the top flat of the barrel and around the muzzle. The only part of the revolver to show significant finish loss is the triggerguard, which has had most of its finish flake away, leaving a smooth grayish-brown patina. The 4 ½” octagonal barrel bears the expected Birmingham commercial proof marks of crowned crossed scepters the left angled flat, just in front of the frame juncture. The cylinder is well marked with the usual Birmingham commercial proofs between the chambers. The cylinder was case hardened, as were many Tranter and Adams cylinders, and retains none of the coloring, instead having a mostly smooth pewter gray color. Most casehardened Tranter cylinders appear in this condition today. The metal is mostly gray but is starting to develop some lightly oxidized brown surface patina. The cylinder appears to retain all of its original cones, and they are all in very crisp and fine condition with sharp edges and no significant battering or damage. The butt cap and backstrap are both case hardened as well and retain no real color, with a mostly smooth gray appearance with some traces of mottling and a lightly developing brownish layer of surface oxidation. The bore of the revolver rates about VERY FINE as well, with sharp five-groove rifling, with the grooves being about twice as wide as the lands. The bore is mostly bright and shows only some very lightly scattered pinpricking and some frosting along its length. The metal of the pistol is smooth and is essentially free of any pitting, with only some very lightly scattered areas of minute pinpricking, mostly around the chamber mouths, the muzzle and the frame forward of the chamber mouths. Unlike many Tranter revolvers this one is plain with the only engraving being some light lines at the muzzle and boarder lines around the edges of the frame and the cylinder faces. The right side of the frame retains both the original Tranter’s patent pivoting hook safety as well as the patented S-shaped spring catch that retains the cylinder arbor pin. Both the safety and the arbor pin catch are in very nice condition and both are fully functional. Both retain some traces of their original purple tinged fire blued finish, as does the cylinder arbor pin. The original Tranter “3rd-Model” loading, screw secured loading lever is attached to the left hand side of the frame. The loading lever is marked with a two-line cartouche that reads: W. TRANTER’S / PATENT, just like the frame. The lever functions smoothly and locks securely into place. The original front sight is in dovetailed in place near the muzzle as well, although the “barleycorn” bead has broken off the top of the triangular base and is lost to the ages. The loading lever is in the white and shows no indication of having been finished originally. The smooth varnished walnut grip is in about VERY FINE condition as well and matches the condition of the pistol perfectly. This exact same pattern of grip and finish is pictured on #12368 in The English Connection. Tranters are almost always encountered with checkered grips, and smooth grips must have represented a special order. The grip is solid and free of any breaks, cracks or repairs. The grip does show some minor marks and small dings from handling and use but is free of any significant wear or damage. The revolver is mechanically FINE and the gun times, indexes and locks up, exactly as it should. Both the single action and double action mechanism of the pistol function crisply, however the trigger return spring is broken, so the trigger must be manually reset after each pull. This is a fairly common problem that plagued both the double action Tranter revolvers and the Adams revolvers of the period as well. This minor mechanical issue may well be the reason the revolver remains in such wonderful condition, showing little use.

 

The revolver is contained in a typical Tranter mahogany veneered factory casing with dual brass hook closures and “Bible” hinges. The casing remains in about fine condition with some scattered minor surface marks and mars and some old liquid staining on the lid. The compartmentalized case is lined in dark green baize and the lining appears absolutely original. The lining shows some scattered discoloration and minor damaged from wear and one of the dividers has a crushed and damaged corner where the cylinder pin probably damaged the thin divider in transit. The casing includes a full set of appropriate Tranter accessories, including:

 

1) A TRANTER’S / PATENT  marked brass 80-bore, dual cavity round-nosed bullet mold in excellent condition with nearly all of the blue remaining on the 80 marked spure cutter and excellent cavities.

 

2) A DIXON & SONS / SHEFFIELD marked copper pistol bag shaped powder flask with an adjustable spout with markings for 5/16, 4/16 and 3/16 DRAMS of powder. The flask is in very fine condition with only a broken charging spring worth noting.

 

3) A JAMES DIXON / & SONS / SHEFFIELD marked pewter oiler in fine condition.

 

4) A smooth ebony handled cone wrench with cone pick in its base in very good to fine condition.

 

5) A smooth ebony handled turnscrew in very good to fine condition.

 

6) A correctly sized rosewood cleaning and loading rod with a removable brass jag head that reveals a ball puller, in fine condition.

 

7) A jappaned tin of W. TRANTER’S / PATENT / LUBRICATING BULLETS with correct green paper label and containing a number of heavily oxidized Tranter 80-bore bullets. The tin is in good to very good condition as is the label.

     

8) A jappaned tin of W. TRANTER’S / PATENT / Lubricating Composition with the correct green paper label and containing much of the original lubricant. The tin is in good to very good condition as is the label.

 

9) A tin of Gordon Bros LD percussion caps with an orange paper label. The tin is in good to very good condition as is the label. It still retains some caps, which cannot be shipped via any form of priority or shipping air service.

 

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Tags: Extremely, Rare, TW, Radcliffe, Columbia, SC, Retailer, Marked, Fully, Cased, 4th, Model, Tranter, 80, Bore, Revolver