The Galleries
- Robert E. Petersen Collection
- Ancient Firearms
- The Road to American Liberty
- Seeds of Greatness
- The Prospering New Republic
- A Nation Asunder
- The American West
- Innovation, Oddities and Competition
- Theodore Roosevelt, Elegant Arms
- World War I and Firearms Innovation
- WWII, Korea, Vietnam and Beyond
- For the Fun of It
- Firearms Traditions for Today
- William B. Ruger Special Exhibits
- Freedom's Doorway
Smith & Wesson Pre-War .38/44 Police Target Model revolver
SN 37026
Gold bead front sight, adjustable rear sight.
Diamond magna grips.
Radically extended front of triggerguard done by gunsmith Sukalle
c. 1932.
Smooth grip straps.
Replaced inscribed brass sideplate: "1932 McGIVERN MODEL / 38-44
S&W / 2 GROUPS OF FIVE / SHOTS EACH AT 20 FEET / TIME 9/20
SECOND EACH GROUP / FIRED AUG 20TH 1932 / AT LEAD, SO. DAKOTA RIFLE
/ CLUB BY / ED McGIVERN / EACH GROUP ENTIRELY / COVERED BY HALF
DOLLAR"
This revolver is shown in McGivern's book, Fast and Fancy
Revolver Shooting.
Stumpy, barrel-shaped, 5-foot-5 and a sign painter by vocation, Ed
McGivern probably wouldn't be your first pick as "the fastest gun
in the world." But he was just that in the period between the two
World Wars, traveling across America demonstrating his "fast and
fancy" style of shooting with one and two handguns. McGivern, born
in 1874 and fascinated by guns from an early age, taught himself to
shoot. Although he at first used semi-automatic pistols he soon
found he could achieve a faster rate of fire with a factory
standard double-action revolver. Ultra-skilled muscles and reflexes
proved speedier than recoil operated mechanisms.
As an exhibition shooter, McGivern specialized in hitting aerial
targets and in hitting two targets - with two revolvers -
simultaneously. As his shooting career progressed, so did the
complexity of McGivern's act. As the number of targets grew, so did
the need for rapidity of fire, a challenge to which he devoted most
of his adult life: just how fast and how straight could a man shoot
a handgun? McGivern's crowning shooting feat as recorded in The
Guiness Book of World Records took place when he was 58 years
old and on tour. Of it, the book says: "The greatest rapid fire
feat. Ed McGivern fired two times from 15 feet five shots which
could be covered by a half-dollar piece in 45/100's of a second,
August 20, 1932."
While active as an exhibition shooter and, later, after arthritis
ended that career, McGivern delved deep into the practical
applications of his art, teaching shooting to law enforcement
officers and servicemen. When he died at age 83 in 1957 he was
still studying and passing on what he had learned in his long
career. His lessons remain startlingly simple: close attention to
the fundamentals of shooting, sight alignment, sight picture, and
trigger control - and practice, practice and more practice - make a
man a marksman.
From a youthful interest in firearms, Ed McGivern developed an
uncanny skill in combining speed with accuracy in handgun shooting.
He was endowed with unusually keen vision, and his reflexes rivaled
those of a cat. Although small in stature and with proportionally
small hands, these physical features posed no handicap. He reached
his peak performance after age 50 and was able to accomplish feats
with firearms that have never been equaled.
Not only did he use stationary targets, but a wide variety of
aerial targets ranging from quarter-sized lead discs to clay
shotgun targets thrown singly or in multiples. He could hit a tin
can thrown in the air six times before it struck the ground, and he
was also known to cut tossed circular cards edgewise while they
were still in flight. His accomplishments were recorded by
electrical timing devices and authenticated by many reliable
witnesses.
Walter Groff and Ed McGivern worked together in producing the most
remarkable shooting exhibitions ever conducted in the United
States. The firearms and accessories displayed here are from Mr.
Groff's estate and were donated by his wife.