Got guns?

doublejj

Well-Known Member
I'm sure I have posted this before......
......by John E. Holbrook
In early July 1967 I was sent to South Vietnam to try to determine why many of the 500 lb. bombs being delivered by naval aircraft were not detonating. I had extensive experience with both conventional and nuclear weapons. The VC would dig up these duds, melt out the Amatol and use the explosive to manufacture crude but very effective anti-personnel booby traps. I was assigned an EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) team and we would be escorted by whatever Army or Marine units were available for protection. We would remove the fuses and detonate the bombs.
On July 13, 1967, while on one of these missions, we were attacked by a force of approximately 50 Viet Cong. As the attack developed my M16A1 jammed, which left me unarmed. I came across a wounded Marine officer, Captain Eldon M. Martin lying in a rice paddy. Captain Martin, although severely wounded was alert and indicated that he was lying on an M14, which was under water and that he had a fully loaded .45 pistol in his holster.
As I removed the Colt M1911A1 .45 automatic (serial # 23002XX) from the Captain, I observed three VC armed with AK-47s moving toward me in a crouched position through the thick grass which was about 2 meters high. I waited until they were within about 4 meters from me. I rose to a kneeling position using the grass as a shield. I put the front sight of the Colt on the man on the left and pulled the trigger. The man in the middle went down! I had jerked the trigger and was very lucky to have gotten a hit. I then moved back to the man on the left, held my breath and fired again. This round hit the man on the left in the chest and he went down. The last man realized what was happening and began firing his AK in my direction. I could see the bullets hitting the water in front of me as he brought the AK up. I fired my third round which hit the magazine of the AK, then glanced down striking him in the right leg. As he spun around from the impact of the 230 grain bullet, I fired two more rounds one of which hit him in the temple just above the left eye. The gunfight was over!
This action lasted not more that 4 seconds and I got four hits with five rounds of GI 230 grain hardball from a pistol that had mud and water in it. All of these hits were one shot stops against three men armed with automatic weapons. God bless the .45 ACP.
I must thank my father, who was the Sheriff of San Patricio County, Texas during World War II. He carried a Colt Government Model and I was shooting the big Colt when I was 10. I was a very good shot with both pistol and rifle very early in life and took my first deer when I was 11. I must also thank John Browning and Colt for inventing and producing the finest combat pistol ever made, bar none. I believe that if I had been armed with a 9MM, both our names would be on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C.
Captain Martin, although badly wounded, survived the action. He insisted that I keep the Colt and I still have it. The greatest honor was when he named his first son after me in 1971. Unfortunately, Captain Martin died in 1991 of MLS. He was a good man, I miss him as I do all the fine young Americans who died in Vietnam.
After that action, I “lost” the M16 and acquired an M14, and I was in love.
John E. Holbrook
Chief Aviation Machinist Mate
U.S. Navy (Retired)
SN 361-43-78
 

ODanksta

Well-Known Member
I had this old war horse out & put a couple of boxes of good ol hardball thru the other day, still shoots great (with a new mag!)...of the 4 magazines I have for this weapon, the only 1 that worked well was a new after market. The 3 old Mil issue mags are so old & wornout I would get 1 or 2 fail to feed ever tiem. But the new mag never skipped a beat, Bam Bam Bam...Good thing I had the new mag or I would have thought something was wrong with the gun...
I liberated this beauty from a dead VC in 1969 & I brought it home from Vietnam. To say I have a personal attachment would be a vast understatement.....
View attachment 3364153
Nice looks just like mine but older.. CAM02755.jpg
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
@TripleMindedGee5150

Merrimack Arms and Brown Mfg both produced a .41 cal RF, side swing turn, 2.5” octagon barrel derringer manufactured in Newburyport, Massachusetts, based on a design Ptd by Charles Ballard April 9, 1867. Both had the name “Southerner” stamped into the top of the barrel and were produced to appeal to people in southern states primarily bordering Gulf of Mexico and Miss river. I would say more a gambler’s vest pocket gun than a hooker. Made from 1866 to 1873. Info from “Guns of the Old West” by Chapel
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
@BarnBuster

holy cow balls!

on average, $8,000!

I was wanting a Nighthawk 45 AND a Barrett 50 cal.... but now I suppose I will spend that on ONE holbrook 45!
Hey, C, good to see you.

HA HA, yeah, most of his stuff is top of the line. Many of them have factory letters and such that contribute to the value. He is someone to trust though, and you can be sure of what you're getting. If you're looking to purchase some quality and are willing to bid at auction, check out the premiere auctions at:

http://jamesdjulia.com/auction/373-march-2015-firearms-auction-tradition-continues/?session=2
http://www.rockislandauction.com/auction_photo/aid/64

sign up for accounts and they'll send you stuff. Sometimes you can get a deal. Man, they got some nice weapons. I get a hard on the minute I get into the site. You got access to a Class III, don't you? Real sweet stuff.. Lots of good 411 to add to your knowledge, too.

Market on 1911's, especially pristine ones or those with a history has really gone up past couple of years it seems. l like the old stuff but anymore, you know I think I would rather get a new Ed Brown or Les Bauer, maybe some engraving on it. Did you ever think about doing that and maybe sending it out to a custom gunsmith and getting it tweaked? Some of those custom smiths have some nice weapons for sale.
 
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TripleMindedGee5150

Well-Known Member
@BarnBuster that's exactly it! Sure enough I check the barrel this morning. And there it was "Southerner" had never even seen that. Pretty cool.

We also have few old rifles and an old shot gun. I mean those old school long barrel shotguns you see in Looney toons cartoons.
 

overgrowem

Well-Known Member
TRIVIA: What major western star did Roy Rogers replace in his first staring role? Why was he given that role?
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
So are black powder rifles legal to own in Colorado if you are growing?
well, here is Colorado definition of a firearm..sounds like a potential gray area. I wouldn't want to be a test case:)

The term firearm means (a) any weapon (including a starter gun) which will or is designed to or may readily be converted to expel a projectile by the action of an explosive; (b) the frame or receiver of any such weapon; (c) any firearm muffler or firearm silencer; or (d) any destructive device. Such term does not include an antique firearm.


Jul 2, 2014 By John Ingold, The Denver Post
According to marijuana attorney Sean McAllister: “Guns are only a problem under state law if you possess them with illegal drugs. Guns and illegal drugs can result in a five-year mandatory prison sentence. Guns and legal things do not create a problem under state law. So there is no issue under state law if you possess a legal amount of marijuana.” That legal amount is one ounce for anyone 21 and older (two ounces if you are a registered Colorado medical marijuana patient). However, at the federal level where marijuana is not legal, McAllister says there are potential consequences. “The most common problem is if people admit on an Alcohol Tobacco Firearms (ATF) background check for purchasing a gun or getting a concealed-weapons permit that they use marijuana,” McAllister says. “They will likely be denied that license or gun purchase since the federal government considers it a drug of abuse.

and here:
http://www.newfalconherald.com/DisplayArticle.php?ArticleID=10147
 
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