Extraordinary October 2015 Firearms Auction
Generates Approximately $15 Million!

Auction: October 5th, 6th & 7th, 2015

Preview: October 2nd - 4th, 2015 and October 5th, 6th & 7th, 2015

Please Note: All prices include the hammer price plus the buyer’s premium, which is paid by the buyer as part of the purchase price. The prices noted here after the auction are considered unofficial and do not become official until after the 46th day.

If you have questions please email firearms@jamesdjulia.com.


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Image Lot
Price
Description
1167
$1,840.00

CONFEDERATE D-GUARD BOWIE KNIFE.

Classic Confederate D-Guard bowie knife with 13-1/2″ blade measuring 18-1/2″ overall. Double edged blade is about 1-5/8″ wide and over 1/3″ thick at ricasso. Blade appears to have been made from a file which was so typical of Confederate fighting knives. PROVENANCE: The Estate Collection of Phil A. Bleakney, Jr. CONDITION: Good overall. Old cleaning, staining & pitting overall. Grip is cleaned & weathered. Knife appears to be all original authentic. Blade still retains an extremely sharp edge. 49059-205 JS (1,000-2,000) – Lot 1167

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3371
$17,250.00

VERY FINE CONFEDERATE LEMAT GRAPESHOT REVOLVER.

SN 1820. 42 Cal./18 Bore. This is a very fine orig example of the standard production LeMat grape-shot revolver. Standard production guns, often called 2nd Models, feature improvements made by LeMat that worked the best after lots of service in the field by Confederates in the field reporting problems in the early Civil War years, including Colt style ratchet system to turn cyl. The revolver has the distinctive LeMat 9-shot cyl. 42 caliber rifled bbl with smooth bore ‘grape-shot’ 18 ga bbl for firing buckshot. The top bbl flat is marked “Col. LeMat Bte s.g.d.g. Paris” which is the standard addressing on LeMat standard production guns. There were about 2000 Paris made LeMat revolvers all made for Confederate service and few survive retaining so much of their orig finish such as this example. This example appears 100% orig & authentic in every regard with matching SNs & secondary numbers on every part normally numbered including bbl, shotgun bbl, loading arm, removable rammer, plunger, ramrod screw, frame, trigger, hammer, cyl, frame latch, grips, grip screw and no doubt other internal parts if gun had been further disassembled. LeMat revolvers were prized by their Confederate owners (and the Yankee capturers too). Many notable Confederate Generals and Officers were known to have carried these unique weapons. In Charles Frazier’s 1997 National Book Awards winning Cold Mountain the book’s hero Inman proudly owned a pair of LeMat revolvers showing how well known this particular revolver is among modern culture. CONDITION: Gun overall is plum/gray overall, retaining much of its orig bright finish on bbl, frame & cyl though blue has turned mostly dark plum in color. Scattered areas of staining & pitting. Bbl address and SNs are all crisp and well defined. This gun by NRA standards grades very good-fine, by Confederate standards it is an excellent example. Stocks are crisp, solid & sound, very well fit with crisp checkering, good color & grain with few minor blemishes unaffecting aesthetics. Mechanically gun functions well. 49166-1 JS (15,000-25,000) – Lot 3371