The rifle that fired the first shot at the Battle of Bunker Hill sold at the Morphy’s Auction House in Denver, Penn. for $492,000.
Historical Guns
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Gun that fired the first shot at the Battle of Bunker Hill Sold for $492,000
BY Max Slowik Published: October 30, 2019 Updated: August 3, 2024The Murder of Malcolm X: Muslim Fratricide in Tumultuous 1960’s America
BY Will Dabbs Published: October 24, 2019 Updated: October 24, 2019In his early years, Malcolm X advocated violence. But when he later took a stand for peace, he became a target—shot by a shotgun pistol, 9mm, and M1911A1.
Drugs, Guns, and Money
BY Will Dabbs Published: October 17, 2019 Updated: October 17, 2019In a world where vacuous ill-informed talking heads chatter like chimps about assault rifles, weapons of mass destruction, and sundry other gun-related topics they clearly fail to understand, the gory machinegun murders of German Jimenez Panesso and his associate Juan Carlos Hernandez were actually the real deal.
Operation Fast and Furious and the Romanian Cugir WASR 10/63
BY Will Dabbs Published: October 4, 2019 Updated: October 4, 2019That it ultimately cost the life of a patriot of Brian Terry’s caliber, as well as hundreds of Mexican nationals, make the whole sordid mess one of the most egregious government failures in American history.
The Killing of a Killer: The IRA, Jock Davison, and the Makarov PM
BY Will Dabbs Published: September 25, 2019 Updated: September 25, 2019Though the IRA made peace with the British, Irish guerrilla fighters sometimes remained killers. In this case, a bar fight led to a death by a Makarov PM.
Disneyworld and the Death of Osama bin Laden
BY Will Dabbs Published: September 20, 2019 Updated: September 20, 2019US Navy SEAL named Rob O’Neill had drilled a pair of Black Hills 77-grain OTM 5.56mm rounds through the brain of the single most reviled human being on the planet. Osama bin Laden, the architect of the single greatest terrorist attack in modern history, was finally queued up to meet his seventy dark-haired virgins.
Winchester 1907 & The Super-Villain’s Sidekick
BY Will Dabbs Published: September 13, 2019 Updated: September 13, 2019On June 30, 1934, the German Schutzstaffel (SS) under orders from Adolph Hitler executed Operation Hummingbird. This decapitation strike against their erstwhile brothers in the Sturmabteilung (SA) was intended to remove the reprobate SA commander Ernst Rohm and consolidate supreme power in pre-WW2 Germany under Hitler’s personal control. Between 85 and 200 Germans fell to these brutal extra-judicial killings. History has come to refer to Operation Hummingbird as the Night of the Long Knives.
Cimarron Lightning Revolver Review
BY Aram Von Benedikt Published: August 31, 2019 Updated: August 31, 2024“I’m your Huckleberry!” The phrase conjures up scenes of Doc Holliday facing down bad guys, eyes gleaming and fingers gently toying with the curvaceous grips of an unusual-looking revolver. And yup! This is the gun.
The Photograph that Lost a War
BY Will Dabbs Published: August 31, 2019 Updated: August 31, 2019On February 1, 1968, Saigon, South Vietnam, was in the opening throes of the Tet Offensive. North Vietnamese commanders called it “The General Offensive and Uprising of Tet Mau Than 1968.” Two days prior more than 80,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army troops had attacked more than 100 towns including 36 of 44 provincial South Vietnamese capitals.
The Shootout That Toppled a Monarchy
BY Will Dabbs Published: August 22, 2019 Updated: August 22, 2019Reading about the conspiracy theories that orbit around the eradication of the Nepalese monarchy makes the JFK assassination look like a first-grade field trip to the zoo.