This elaborately engraved Colt New Frontier was intended for NRA Life Member John F. Kennedy.
In 1967, as the 100th anniversary of the NRA approached, the organization asked the foremost authority of Colt Firearms, James E. Serven, to compile a history of the NRA for publication. The result of his work, “Americans and their Guns,” was dedicated to: “Those Americans citizens who came before and won freedom, those now here who fight to preserve it, and to those yet to come who will preserve it.”
Of the many fascinating tales about the NRA and its first 100 years as related by Serven was the interest that more than a half-dozen* residents of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC, took in the founding and activities of the NRA, to the point that they themselves signed up as Life Members.
One of the more interesting Colt revolvers on display at the NRA’s National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, VA, is a New Frontier model made for the 35th Chief Executive of the United States, John F. Kennedy. It is elaborately engraved with gold inlays of the White House, PT 109 and the President’s initials, “JFK.” The .45 Colt also has an inscription on the backstrap, typical of Colt presentation models since Samuel Colt himself first started making presentations of his embellished and cased firearms in the 1850s. The inscription reads: “To John Fitzgerald Kennedy 35th President of the United States from Colt’s Patent Fire Arms MFG Co. 1963.”
This presentation is unique in that the very model—New Frontier—takes its name from the campaign platform of then-candidate Senator Kennedy. The post-World War II era signaled the new age of television, and the most popular TV shows in the 1950s were cowboy series like the “Life & Legend of Wyatt Earp,” “Johnny Ringo,” “Gunsmoke” and dozens of others. Colt capitalized on the popularity of these shows by reintroducing its famous Single Action Army revolver (SAA), the iconic Peacemaker, in 1956.
In 1961, Colt introduced the New Frontier model after Senator Kennedy’s speech accepting the Democratic Nomination for President at the Convention. He said: “We stand today on the edge of a new frontier—the frontier of the 1960s, the frontier of unknown opportunities and perils, the frontier of unfilled hopes and unfilled threats. … Beyond that frontier are uncharted areas of science and space, unsolved problems of peace and war, unconquered problems of ignorance and prejudice, unanswered questions of poverty and surplus.” The New Frontier became Kennedy’s campaign platform, and it became Colt’s modernized version of the venerable SAA by having adjustable sights and a non-fluted cylinder.
To commemorate the new administration, Colt engravers set out to make a presentation-grade New Frontier revolver that President Kennedy would appreciate. Colt employees were excited to work on and contribute to the completion of the gun for Kennedy, who was an avid gun collector and NRA Life Member. Two completed revolvers were offered for consideration by the Colt Board (the other one is in the Autry Museum of the American West), but Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas, TX, in November, 1963 ended the chance of completing the gun and making the presentation.
President Kennedy wasn’t the only Chief Executive who enjoyed firearms for both shooting and collecting. Both George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were known to have been keen collectors.