I wonder if there are any Webley experts out there who can answer this one!
I've now seen - on this forum and elsewhere - several Webley Mk 1** revolvers with the receiver stamped, below and back from the cylinder on the left side, as follows or similar: C/N/1, and 4.07. I've also seen it on several Mk 11 revolvers. These revolvers all seem to have the N mark on the hump, indicating Royal Navy ownership. I understand that the Mk I** was a Royal Navy upgrade of 1914, sometimes of the Mk 1*, but also of unmodified Mk 1 revolvers, presumably including guns already in naval stores.
Several times on this forum I have seen the C/N marking on these revolvers cited as evidence of Canadian Navy ownership. Is this just guesswork, or does anyone know of a published authority? I assume that the numbers indicate date - thus the example above is April 1907. If the C/N/I mark is concurrent with the date mark, then this Canadian ownership mark - if that's what it is - would appear to predate the 1914 conversion.
I'm a bit hesitant about accepting this without authority as I'm not entirely sure of the status of the 'Canadian Navy' circa 1907, and whether or not there are any parallels for the C/N mark on any other arms used by Canadian-based naval forces at this period, prior to the First World War.
The Mark I** with the C/N markings seems rare but has shown up several times recently in Canada, including this forum, suggesting a Canadian connection. However, I suspect that these revolvers have mostly been bought up from the US, and may have been part of the large number of Webleys sold off from Britain to the US in the 60s or so (the two Mk 1** I have seen are both shaved for 45 ACP as happened to most Webley 455s arriving in the US then, and one also had the ENGLAND import mark stamped on the barrel).
There may be a reference work I haven't seen that pins down this Canadian connection. It would be great to find out as it would give these rare revolvers real historical significance to collectors of Canadian guns. All thoughts much appreciated!
I've now seen - on this forum and elsewhere - several Webley Mk 1** revolvers with the receiver stamped, below and back from the cylinder on the left side, as follows or similar: C/N/1, and 4.07. I've also seen it on several Mk 11 revolvers. These revolvers all seem to have the N mark on the hump, indicating Royal Navy ownership. I understand that the Mk I** was a Royal Navy upgrade of 1914, sometimes of the Mk 1*, but also of unmodified Mk 1 revolvers, presumably including guns already in naval stores.
Several times on this forum I have seen the C/N marking on these revolvers cited as evidence of Canadian Navy ownership. Is this just guesswork, or does anyone know of a published authority? I assume that the numbers indicate date - thus the example above is April 1907. If the C/N/I mark is concurrent with the date mark, then this Canadian ownership mark - if that's what it is - would appear to predate the 1914 conversion.
I'm a bit hesitant about accepting this without authority as I'm not entirely sure of the status of the 'Canadian Navy' circa 1907, and whether or not there are any parallels for the C/N mark on any other arms used by Canadian-based naval forces at this period, prior to the First World War.
The Mark I** with the C/N markings seems rare but has shown up several times recently in Canada, including this forum, suggesting a Canadian connection. However, I suspect that these revolvers have mostly been bought up from the US, and may have been part of the large number of Webleys sold off from Britain to the US in the 60s or so (the two Mk 1** I have seen are both shaved for 45 ACP as happened to most Webley 455s arriving in the US then, and one also had the ENGLAND import mark stamped on the barrel).
There may be a reference work I haven't seen that pins down this Canadian connection. It would be great to find out as it would give these rare revolvers real historical significance to collectors of Canadian guns. All thoughts much appreciated!