Colt Paterson
The Colt Paterson was the first practical commercial repeating revolver, patented by Samuel Colt on February 25, 1836, after he conceived the design during a voyage at sea in 1830-1831.[1][2] Produced by the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company in Paterson, New Jersey, from 1836 to 1842, it featured a revolving cylinder with multiple chambers aligned behind a single fixed barrel, enabling multiple shots via percussion cap ignition without reloading between each.[3][2] This innovation marked a departure from single-shot pistols and unreliable multi-barrel designs like pepperboxes, providing reliable synchronization between cylinder and barrel through Colt's patented mechanism.[2] Available in pocket (.28 caliber), belt (.31 caliber), and holster (.36 caliber, often called the "Texas Paterson") models, the single-action revolver incorporated a folding trigger that deployed upon cocking the hammer and lacked an integrated loading lever in early variants, necessitating separate tools for charging.[1][4] Approximately 2,850 revolvers were manufactured before the company's bankruptcy in 1842, attributed to production inefficiencies, parts interchangeability issues, and weak civilian sales despite military interest.[4][2] The Paterson gained legendary status through its adoption by the Texas Rangers, who ordered 180 holster models in 1839 for naval use before reallocating them to land forces; its repeating fire capability proved decisive in the 1844 Battle of Walker's Creek, where Captain John Coffee Hays's command repelled a superior Comanche force, validating the design's effectiveness in frontier combat.[1][4] This real-world validation spurred demand, influencing subsequent Colt developments like the 1847 Walker revolver and establishing the revolving-cylinder principle as foundational to modern handguns.[2][4]