Discord-logo.jpg Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Difference between revisions of "Hell on Wheels"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:
 
== Colt 1860 Army==
 
== Colt 1860 Army==
 
During the opening credits sequence, Bohannon is seen with a [[Colt 1860 Army]] instead of his usual Griswold & Gunnison. The 1860 was the most common handgun in the United States at the time, most had a brass trigger guard (see photo), they were not manufactured with a brass frame like the Griswold above. The brass framed pistol Bohannon uses in the opening episode is neither an 1860 nor a Griswold but is an amalgam reproduction that was likely used as a stop gap piece for filming. [[Image:1860Army.jpg|thumb|none|450px|Colt 1860 Army - .44 Percussion.]]
 
During the opening credits sequence, Bohannon is seen with a [[Colt 1860 Army]] instead of his usual Griswold & Gunnison. The 1860 was the most common handgun in the United States at the time, most had a brass trigger guard (see photo), they were not manufactured with a brass frame like the Griswold above. The brass framed pistol Bohannon uses in the opening episode is neither an 1860 nor a Griswold but is an amalgam reproduction that was likely used as a stop gap piece for filming. [[Image:1860Army.jpg|thumb|none|450px|Colt 1860 Army - .44 Percussion.]]
[[Image:HellOnWheels1860ArmyCredits.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Bohannon holds a Colt 1860 in the opening credits.]]
+
[[Image:HellOnWheels1860ArmyCredits.jpg|thumb|none|602px|Bohannon holds a Colt 1860 in the opening credits.]]
  
 
==Remington 1858 New Model Army==
 
==Remington 1858 New Model Army==

Revision as of 21:49, 13 February 2014

Gun remote control.jpg

This show is currently airing.

This article or section is for a series that is Ongoing, or currently on the air and thus is a continuous work in progress.
Screencaps may not be immediately available and information may not be up to date.

The following firearms were used in AMC's Hell On Wheels:

Hell On Wheels (2011)


Griswold & Gunnison

Former Confederate soldier Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount) carries a Confederate-made Griswold & Gunnison Revolver, by which he is recognized in "Pilot" (S1E01). The correct Griswold & Gunnison is visible for a split second at 34:20 in Episode 3, "A New Birth of Freedom." In some scenes, he uses a brass-framed copy of the 1860 Colt Army revolver, a weapon which did not exist until the Italians started making them during the 1960s. The rebated cylinder and 1860-type loading lever can be seen in several episodes, especially the one where he lends it to the ex-slave and teaches him to shoot.

Griswold & Gunnison revolver - .36 Percussion.
In "Pilot" (S1E01), Bohannon holds his "Griswold & Gunnison" after murdering a Union soldier who raped his wife.
In "Pilot" (S1E01), Bohannon holds his "Griswold & Gunnison" (obviously a Colt 1860 Army).

Colt 1860 Army

During the opening credits sequence, Bohannon is seen with a Colt 1860 Army instead of his usual Griswold & Gunnison. The 1860 was the most common handgun in the United States at the time, most had a brass trigger guard (see photo), they were not manufactured with a brass frame like the Griswold above. The brass framed pistol Bohannon uses in the opening episode is neither an 1860 nor a Griswold but is an amalgam reproduction that was likely used as a stop gap piece for filming.

Colt 1860 Army - .44 Percussion.
Bohannon holds a Colt 1860 in the opening credits.

Remington 1858 New Model Army

Former Union soldier Daniel Johnson (Ted Levine) carries a Remington 1858 New Army in Episode 1. This gun appears to be a modern and unauthentic replica, known as "Texas Model", because brass-framed remingtons were never manufactured.

Remington 1858 New Model Army - .44 Percussion
"That is my Remington pointed at your gut."

Sharps 1874

In the episode 4 of the second season Bohannon shoots a railroad worker tortured by the Sioux with this rifle. He calls it the long rifle. This is again a problem of dating since the railroad was completed in 1869 and the 1874 model came . . . well . . . later.

Sharps 1874 long rifle with Malcom model scope
Closer look at the sight

Winchester 1866 "Yellowboy"

Prevalent in many scenes, especially "Timshel" (Season 1, Episode 9), this weapon, while period correct, would not have been issued to the US Cavalry as portrayed in the show.

Winchester 1866 "Yellow Boy" Rifle - .44 RF.

Do Not Sell My Personal Information