Skip to navigation Skip to main content Skip to footer
Your browser is outated!

Update your browser to view this website correctly.

Update my browser now

1861 Navy Revolver

1861 Navy
HoverTap To Zoom

1861 Navy

Steel
Available Calibers:
.36
Available Models:
340500
Select Model:
1861 Navy

1861 Navy

Steel

1861 Navy

Civil Brass
Item Number Model Model Description MSRP Caliber Barrel Length Frame Finish Cylinder Grip Material Barrel Barrel Finish Trigger Guard Finish Backstrap Finish Number of Grooves Twist Rate Overall Length Avg. Weight
340500 1861 Navy Steel $429 .36 7.5" Case-Hardened 6-shot, engraved Walnut Round Blue Steel Steel 7 1:32, LH 13" 2 lbs
340630 1861 Navy Civil Brass $429 .36 7.5" Case-Hardened 6-shot, engraved Walnut Round Blue Brass Brass 7 1:32, LH 13" 2 lbs
Specifications and prices are subject to change without notice.

By the start of the Civil War, Colt had refined the Navy into a sleek, streamlined weapon with an improved loading lever. The 1861 Navy is often acclaimed as Colt’s most handsome pistol.

Uberti’s 1861 Navy Civil Brass met a civilian demand for a medium-frame, light revolver.

Features & Highlights

Percussion Cap Seating

The frame cutout in the rear of the cylinder allows easy access to the nipples for seating percussion caps.

Black Powder Load Seating

In Army and Navy Revolvers

To seat black powder loads in the cylinder of the single-action army and navy revolvers, the loading lever is freed from the latch and pulled downward. This causes the ramrod to move through the frame and ram the load home.