An Uberti-built Single Action Army commemorative honoring General George S. Patton, chambered in .45 Colt. Fully scroll engraved with silver plating, ivory-toned grips, and a walnut presentation case.
Patton carried ivory-gripped sixguns through two wars, and this tribute leans hard into that image. It's an Uberti-built Single Action Army clone dressed for the part, produced as a Patton commemorative in a run of roughly 2,500 around 1987. The whole gun is wrapped in floral scroll engraving, the kind that covers nearly every flat and curve from the muzzle to the backstrap, set against a full silver-plated finish that throws light in every direction.
Look closer and the personal details start to surface. The smooth ivory-toned grips carry a red, white, and blue enamel medallion reading 1885 over 1945, the years that bracket Patton's birth and the close of his career. One grip panel is scratched with the initials GSP. The other reads DLS. Those marks nod to the figures tied to the general's story, and they give the gun a voice that most commemoratives never get.
The barrel reads CAL. 45 L.C. along the engraved flat, and it rides in the standard 5.5 inch length that balances the SAA so well. The lanyard ring at the butt is a working detail, not just decoration. The four-click single action mechanism behaves exactly as the pattern demands. And the engraving rewards a slow study, with feathered borders, dotted backgrounds, and tight scroll all cut by hand.
It comes cased in a walnut presentation box lined in deep red velvet, the kind of setting these guns were built to live in. For a collector drawn to Patton, to engraved sixguns, or to the artistry that turns a working revolver into a display piece, this one earns its place on the shelf and holds its own under good light.
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