Apparently Spang and Wallace did not make guns past 1845 and also made pistols. Your gun is probably a buck and ball gun and cartridges for that type weapon can be found at http://www.iusb.edu/~journal/2000/stanage.html A buck and ball gun used a cartridge containing buckshot and a ball. Either buckshot or a ball, not both at once. And certainly not in a cartridge -- it's a muzzle loader.
eh yes, when closing the gun, depress the cocking lever, then the trigger and slowly release the C-lever (or the hammer,if your version is the one with exposed hammer), then recock. but is it not safer to walk around with the action open? or just use the safety...
There were at least two models of The American .38 Revolver manufactured in the very early 1900s. I have one of each. One came to me from my Grandfather (1880-1964) and the other from an Uncle (1875-1955). One model is 'hammerless', i.e. double action only. There is an exposed hammer but without a thumb tang. There is a scoring on the hammer to facilitate pulling it back needed. This model was an ideal pocket gun - no hammer tang to hand up in the pocket. The second is both double action and single action. This hammer has a thumb tang. Neither of the guns have any safety features to prevent accidental firing. A common way would be to rest the hammer in between two cartridges, or on an empty chamber on on a fired cartridge. These were the Saturday night specials of the day. The gun's firing pin was part of the hammer and as such was not replaceable. The firing pin easily broke and the entire hammer had to be replace - obviously these guns were not for target practice. As an FYI, my Grandfather and Uncle lived in the deep South during KKK days.
By breaking it with a hammer.
ham-mer two
a hammer
Uncle Hammer and the Logan family surprised the Wallace's by presenting them with a fake deed to their land, making them believe they had lost their ownership. This confrontation exposed the Wallace's unethical behavior and put them in a position of vulnerability.
nitro hunter shotgun single barrel with exposed hammer stamped belknap hdwre and mfg serial 5516
Depends on what your shotgun is. If you have one of the older hammered shotguns (exposed hammer), you can decock them the same way you would any other firearm with an exposed hammer - you gently lower the hammer with your thumb. If you have a shotgun which doesn't have an exposed hammer, your only feasible way of going about this is to empty the magazine, be especially certain to ensure that the chamber is empty, and pull the trigger.
You would first need to provide all of the markings found on the gun.
If your pump 12 ga. has an exposed hammer, it's most likely a model 1898, as all later models of exposed hammer Marlin shotguns had the model marked on the upper tang behind the trigger. If it is not an exposed hammer, then the model designation is on the bottom, where the receiver meets the mag tube.
William Wallace used the claymore the war hammer the ball and chain the shield and dirk combo
To find hammers for old rabbit ear shotguns check with Dixie Gun Works
David "The Hammer" Schultz of the Philadelphia Flyers holds the record with 472 minutes.
you don't
no . riverside was mainly produced after 1914, using fluid steel barrels.
Model 49, 3000 made form 1925 to 1928 only
The Marlin model 24 shotgun was produced by Marlin from 1908-1915.