Factory-engraved Smith & Wesson .32 Double Action Fourth Model in nickel with mother of pearl grips, shipped in 1893 to M. W. Robinson Co. Comes with its original case, period UMC .32 S&W cartridges, cleaning tools, and a signed S&W Historical Foundation letter.
Open the case and the first thing that catches you is the engraving. It runs across nearly every surface of this .32 Double Action Fourth Model, the tight flowing scrollwork that collectors associate with the Smith & Wesson shop of the period. The factory letter ties it to a specific name, and that's where this one separates itself from the crowd of small-frame top-breaks. The accompanying Smith & Wesson Historical Foundation letter, signed by Roy Jinks, confirms the revolver left the factory on January 16, 1893, with type 3 engraving, nickel finish, a 3.5 inch barrel, and pearl grips. It shipped to M. W. Robinson Co. of New York, a major arms jobber of the era, who added the case.
The scroll coverage is dense and confident. It wraps the frame, flows along the barrel rib, fills the cylinder flutes, and works into the smaller contours around the action and trigger guard. Bright nickel carries it all, throwing light the way only period polished nickel does. The mother of pearl grips show the natural iridescent play of the material, a soft glow set against the cool reflective steel. That contrast was the whole point of a piece ordered this way.
The top-break action functions as designed, the barrel latch releasing the assembly to swing the cylinder up for loading. This is the Fourth Model, the variation S&W introduced in 1883 and built into the early 1900s, chambered for the .32 S&W cartridge. The barrel address and patent dates read cleanly on the rib.
The case completes the story. Worn blue velvet, the period green UMC .32 S&W cartridge box, the cleaning brush and rod, all tucked in their original recesses. A documented, factory-engraved, special-order S&W from the 1890s with the original case and accessories intact is the kind of package that rarely surfaces together. This is one to hold, and one to keep behind glass.
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