In 1861,  with very few resources, the Confederacy attempted to arm itself. Several armories and factories were created in the South to help meet  these needs.
          
          
          Established by Lt. Col. James H. Burton at the request of  the Confederate Chief of Ordnance, the private manufacturing firm of  Spiller & Burr set out to manufacture 15,000 revolvers over two and  one half years for the Confederate cavalry. The contract called for a  .36 caliber Navy revolver, Colt's model. Colt's Navy revolver had been  adopted by the Confederate government as a standard revolver, but Burton  felt another type of revolver was superior to Colt's. Burton selected  the Whitney revolver, Second Model, First Type as a model arm for  Spiller & Burr. Burton based his decision on the merits of the arm's  performance, stability, design, and ease of construction.      The company  encountered difficulty producing the revolver in quantity due to a  shortage of labor and problems with raw materials. And Sherman's march  through Georgia imposed even more problems.
          
          
          The factory ceased  production at war's end with slightly more than 1,500 revolvers  fabricated, fulfilling only one tenth the number called for in the  original contract.
          
          
          This beautiful re-production is made by F.LLI Pietta.
      
    
    Brass Frame and Backstrap **
  
    .36 Caliber
    6 1/2" Blued Octagonal Barrel
   Casehardened Hammer & Trigger
  Brass Triggerguard
   
    Wood 2-pc Grips
  **The Backstrap is part of the frame. (It is not a separate part.) 
    
     TEMPORARILY OUT OF STOCK!