I Have This Old Gun: Colt Army Special (a.k.a. Official Police)

posted on May 15, 2019
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
oldarmsp.jpg

The Colt Army Special, a popular workhorse of a revolver, has never received the collector recognition it deserves. Nonetheless, shooters have always appreciated its finely crafted action, which became the foundation for Colt’s most celebrated medium-frame revolvers, including the Python.

The Army Special began life in 1908 as an improvement over the New Army & Navy 1892-1903 models, which tended to bind up and get out of time due, in part, to their counterclockwise cylinder rotation. Taking inspiration from Colt’s rugged New Service revolver, the Army Special was given a stronger action, a revamped cylinder release latch, a “Positive Safety Lock” and clockwise cylinder rotation. Most guns were blued, but some were nickeled, and barrel lengths were 4", 4½", 5" and 6". Stocks were stylized black rubber until 1924, when they were changed to checkered walnut. Hoping for military acceptance, Colt dubbed its improved revolver the Army Special.


Although built on a .41-cal. frame, the Army Special was conceived as the perfect platform for the .38 Spl. cartridge, which, introduced in 1898, had quickly established itself as an accurate and effective man-stopper. The guns were also chambered in .32-20 Win., .38-200 and .41 Long Colt. (Additionally, in 1930 approximately 30,000 Army Specials were produced in .22 rimfire.)

But Colt soon realized that more Army Specials were being purchased by police departments than by the military. Thus, in 1927, the revolver’s name was strategically changed to the Official Police. It was a shrewd move, as—until the revolver’s discontinuance in 1969—countless thousands were sold to numerous law enforcement entities, including the railroad police.

Such was the case with this Army Special, with its 6" barrel showing moderate holster wear but retaining a perfect bore. According to its Colt factory letter, on June 16, 1922, it was one of 10 guns shipped to the Union Hardware & Mfg. Co. in Los Angeles for the Union Pacific Railroad. A subsequent UPRR letter states these guns “… were in service with Union Pacific sometime prior to 1927.” This coincides with the fact that the Great Railroad Strike of 1922 resulted in the UPRR ordering a number of firearms during that brief but tumultuous period of rioting strikers. This gun would normally be valued at $450, but, with its supporting documentation, it could command a slight premium from a gun collector who also had a penchant for historical railroadiana.

Gun: Colt Army Special
Chambering: .38 Spl.
Serial No: 480XXX
Manufactured: 1922 (shipped June 16)
Condition: 60 percent—NRA Good (Modern Gun Standards)
Value: $450 (verified UPRR connection boosts the value to $550-$650)

Latest

Proof Research
Proof Research

The PROOF Research PXT: A New Approach to Barrel Rifling

PROOF Research has introduced PROOF eXponential Twist (PXT)—an advancement in rifling that improves durability, accuracy and shootability—to the commercial market.

Review: Springfield Armory Model 2020 Heatseeker

Back when American Rifleman reviewed Springfield's Model 2020 Waypoint, we noted that we ...couldn’t help but wonder if a tactical-version Model 2020 rifle might be a logical future offshoot of the Waypoint hunting rifle." With the Model 2020 Heatseeker, that version is finally here.

Marlin Goes Mad: The Marlin Mad Pig Customs Model 1894

Marlin’s latest Model 1894 lever-action rifle, a collaboration with Mad Pig Customs that is a far cry from traditional, delivers “modern, factory‑installed features previously found only on custom builds.”

The Jewish Community Is Embracing Our 2A Freedom

In this episode of the NRA’s The Armed Citizen Podcast, we interview Gayle Pearlstein, COO and co-founder of Lox & Loaded, a Jewish-owned and -operated gun club that now—after being launched only a year ago—has 50 chapters around the United States.

I Have This Old Gun: The Southerner Derringer

People carrying small firearms for personal protection is not a new concept, and in the middle of the 19th century, many pocket pistols were designed with self-defense in mind. One such gun, the Brown Manufacturing Southerner Derringer, was among the earliest cartridge-firing self-defense guns.

Affordable & Feature-Rich: The Springfield Armory Echelon Alpha 4.0C

Springfield Armory entered the world of modular, striker-fired handguns in 2023 with its Echelon line of pistols, and for 2026, Springfield is introducing an entry-level Echelon model with the Alpha 4.0C.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.