This rare first edition of Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone with the Wind” was used to conceal a .32-caliber pistol.

It was found in 1941 by the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office in Arizona then sent to the FBI for examination.

Firearms examiners compared test bullets and cartridge cases from the gun to similar samples but could not identify the weapon or match it to other evidence.

Published in 1936, this copy of the book resides in the [FBI’S] Laboratory Division’s Reference Firearms Collection in Quantico, Virginia—the gun housed in its 1,037 pages.

https://www.fbi.gov/history/artifacts/gone-with-the-wind

Ian’s video [15:31]:

https://youtu.be/lhy90uT1UtY?si=

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Every time I hear “the FBI weapons lab in Quantico, Virginia” I think of that episode of The Simpsons, where Bart picks out the crossbow from the school’s secret the room of confiscated items :-)

What one item would you fine folks pick if given the chance?

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If I’m going for pragmatic and boring I’d pick an autoseer.

But it might be interesting to own one of the bullets they pseudo-scientifically “analyzed” to tie it back to a specific gun.

Or maybe some DNA evidence used to exonerate the wrongly-convicted.

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I was thinking something like Jack Ruby’s pistol… something that changed history.

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I get that. And I did try to play along… But I’m mostly not interested in owning firearms that serve to glorify feds, or politicians, or criminals. Not really favorite groups of people and owning a firearm comes with some baggage to care for and protect each of them lest they harm someone or decay.

Maybe if MLK or Jimi Hendrix carried a derringer. Or Thurgood Marshall’s shotgun. (No idea whether those are a thing.) But those aren’t likely to be in the crime lab unless involved in a crime amd I also am not interested in having a murder weapon in my house. None of my guns have ever killed anyone (AFAIK) and I’d prefer to keep it that way. Did Harriet Tubman carry a weapon? That would have been illegal but I’d proudly own that.

Notice the items I chose secondarily are still valuable for their historicity, while revering neither criminals, nor the feds (nor violence, generally.)

I also like old and weird or otherwise interesting firearms of all sorts. Maybe I lack imagination.

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This is a community dedicated to discussion around historical arms, mechanically unique arms, and Ian McCollum’s Forgotten Weapons content. Posts requesting an identification of a particular gun (or other arm) are welcome.

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