Thursday, March 13, 2014

The Story of the Colt Lightning Rifle

The Colt Lightning Rifle has a very short but unique history.
The original concept came from a Dentist/wanna be gun maker who lived down the way from Remington in Ilion, New York. He first showed his ideas to Remington, but they were not interested. So Dr. Elliot send a letter off to Colt.
As luck would have it, Colt was interested in making a rifle that was chambered for the same caliber as their models 1873 Peacemaker and 1877 Lighting Double Action Revolvers.
By 1884 Colt had worked out the bugs and offered the new pump action for sale in .32-20, .38-40 and .44-40 calibers.
The guns receiver was similar in size to that of the 1892 Winchester (another carbine made for revolver cartridges). The tube magazine could hold up to 15 rounds. The cartridges were loaded via a side loading gate (again just like the Winchester). The Lightning had an exposed hammer, manipulated by the bolt. Even the straight grip stock looked and felt very similar to the Winchesters.
 
 They gave the gun the name Lightning as a companion to Colt's Model 1877 double action revolver (earlier named the Lightning) and because like the revolver it was fast.

In 1887 Colt introduced two more frame sizes. A small frame in .22 rimfire and a larger frame gun to chamber the big game cartridges .38-55 & .50-95 Express. The large frame .50-95 Lightning below was beautifully restored by Doug Turnbull.

The larger framed guns only lasted 7 years and in 1894 they were disco'd with only 6,496 guns being made.
 
In 1898 the San Francisco Police Department purchased 401 of the medium frame Lightnings in .44-40 for their officers. 

This is one of those San Francisco Police guns:

When production of the medium frame Lightnings ended in 1904 some 89,777 were made.
 
The small framed, rimfire guns found their way into the shooting galleries at state fairs and carnivals, similar to the model 1890 & 1906 Winchester pump action rifles. By 1904 Colt had produced some 89,912 rimfire Lightnings.

In 1904 Colt decided to end production of the gun. This is where the story gets interesting.

Around the mid 1870s Winchester was watching the rise of the handgun market, it appeared that Smith & Wesson and Colt were collecting some serious money making handguns. Around the same time a man named William Mason, a former Colt employee, went to work for Winchester. He was given the task to create a revolver that could compete with the offerings from Colt's and S&W.
This was the gun he created:

At the same time Andrew Burgess designed an improved version of the 1873 Winchester and Colt produced it as the Colt Burgess model of 1883.


According to legend, Winchester was unhappy with Colt cutting into their rifle/carbine market and Colt wasn't to enthused about another possible competitor to their handguns.
During a secret meeting, the leaders of the two companies made an agreement. Winchester would stick to making rifles and Colt would stick to making pistols.
That was the end of the Colt Burgess and the beginning of the end of the Colt Lightning. In the end Colt found that sticking to handguns made more sense.

Thanks to the popularity of Cowboy Action Shooting, gun makers like American Western Arms, United States Fire Arms (USFA), Taurus and Uberti you can buy a quality made replica. 

This is a good thing, because there were only 185,186 Colt Lightnings made (between all three frames). So original guns are hard to find and usually expensive when found.


Below are some pictures of reproduction Lightning Rifles. You can click on the pictures for larger versions.

The America Western Arms Lightning

 The United States Fire Arms Lightning
The Uberti Lightning and Beretta Gold Rush (both made by Uberti)


The Pedersoli Lightning


The Taurus Thunderbolt






References
Guns.com
Wikipedia 
Doug Turnbull Manufacturing
Arms Collectors Forum 
Taurus 
Historical Firearms 

5 comments:

  1. I would like to hear from owners, of the Lightning.45 Colt Rifles! Taurus vs. the Italian made rifles. The price of this rifle goes from $500 to $2,000!! I just want one that works, every time! It seems all have to be redone by a good gunsmith!

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  2. My Taurus Thunderbolt seems to work pretty well, although to be honest I have not shot it very much

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  3. Originally made Colt Lightning rifles were all Bottle-necked cartridges made for Black Powder. The thin necks were blown out when firing keeping all tne powder residue in the barrel and not blowing back into the action. People now wanted straight walled cartridges to match their pistol calibers such as .45 Colt, .38-.357 and they don't seal the chambers like the old bottle-necked ones do. They also had to redo the cartridge carrier to handle the new rounds making them not work as well as the originals.It seems Pedersoli has one of the best is you want a new one.

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  4. Any idea where to purchase the wood grip on a 22 lighting? I'm trying to restore one..

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