Shooting USA: History's Guns: General George S. Patton's Guns

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  • Опубліковано 1 жов 2024
  • Shooting USA airs every Wednesday on Outdoor Channel.
    For more information, head to www.shootingusa...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 77

  • @laserbeam002
    @laserbeam002 Рік тому +23

    America needs a few more Patton's today.

  • @robertbenson9797
    @robertbenson9797 Рік тому +21

    Patton is the only commanding general to pull out of a winter attack, pivot 90 degrees and move 100 miles to begin a new winter attack.
    He had his flaws but no other WWII American general could have done what Patton did to relieve Bastogne.
    If you ever get a chance, visit the American cemetery in Luxembourg City where he is buried.

  • @emmgeevideo
    @emmgeevideo 5 місяців тому +11

    I know this is a channel about guns, but Patton was not a "tank commander" during his days of fame- he was an army commander, a three-star general. He commanded infantry, tanks, intelligence, logistics, etc.

  • @timothysanders431
    @timothysanders431 Рік тому +11

    My father served in Patton's 3 rd Army , 654th tank destroyer battalion, company b headquarters. France ,Belgium, and Luxembourg. That generation was bad ass . Thank you to all that served!

  • @hunterm4188
    @hunterm4188 10 місяців тому +5

    The sheer amount of history that this weapon was involved in is absolutely breathtaking.
    Makes you feel proud to be an American.

  • @cameronmccreary4758
    @cameronmccreary4758 Рік тому +14

    I have seen this report on Patton's guns a couple of years ago. Excellent.

  • @sanderhenkes7591
    @sanderhenkes7591 Рік тому +6

    Legendary general, Legendary Guns!thanks Guy,s.

  • @mtsflorida
    @mtsflorida Рік тому +4

    Well done. Patton sometimes carried the 3 1/2 " barrelled .357 on his right I believe and the Colt Peacemaker with the 4.75" barrell on the other. Patton was quite a gunman. While at Ft. Benning I saw an office constructed where he used a bust of Hitler turned upside down as a trash can. The germans were right when they said peacetime would bring his end. Regrettably a car accident in which he fractured his neck while touring a historcal area he was describing to a dignitary when the driver also looked that caused the accident. My dad who was an army officer after WWII told me the events, also taught history.

  • @tm2bow653
    @tm2bow653 Рік тому +6

    Your channel deserves more subscribers.

  • @mohammedcohen
    @mohammedcohen Місяць тому +3

    53 years ago in 1971 I spent most of my free time at the Patton Museum...the S&W Mod 27 reproduction movie gun was on display near the entrance..I have a slide if it somewhere in my collection of all the picture I took in my better than three years in the army...

  • @Hibernicus1968
    @Hibernicus1968 Рік тому +31

    Technically, Patton's .357 magnum wasn't a Model 27. It was a Registered Magnum, made _long_ before Smith & Wesson started using the designation Model 27. Postwar, S&W made basically the same model, referred to today as Pre-Model 27s by most people (I have one with a 3 1/2" barrel), and they were just referred to as Smith & Wesson .357 magnums until 1957, when S&W started stamping model numbers on the frame underneath the crane.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Рік тому +2

      It also doesn't have ivory grips, they're plastic and it's amazing that nobody including the museum curator knows that.
      There's an interview right here on UA-cam of Patton's driver just a few years back, he was with him for quite some time and tells the story of how Patton told his staff that he wanted ivory grips for that revolver and gave someone the task of going into town somewhere and getting them, his driver took the guy into town and they couldn't find ivory grips for it anywhere probably due to the war and shipping lanes among other things being shut down cutting off the supply of ivory from Africa, not wanting to return without them and suffer Patton's wrath for failing they found a place that had plastic grips and put them on, he laughed and said Patton never knew the difference and apparently nobody else ever has either.

    • @mtsflorida
      @mtsflorida Рік тому

      ​@@dukecraig2402I don't know how you wouldn't know once you carve in notches. I'm drawn to conclude he thumped the handles and found that plastic makes a duller sound than the hard enamel of ivory tusks. Which would be the only reason why he would mutilate part of his equipment.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Рік тому

      @@mtsflorida
      Well without someone coming up with some proof that he knew they were plastic there's only supposition that he knew they were, I mean that's a pretty big suppose right there, he'd have had to have something with actual ivory grips to tap on one and then the other to draw that conclusion, despite the image of him and ivory grips I don't think he was some kind of an authority on them that had his pistol bumped against something he'd have taken pause and said "That didn't sound like an ivory grip should when one bumps into something".
      Also, since his driver was of WW2 vintage that means Patton couldn't have possibly put notches in them as the incidents occurred, only well afterwards after the ivory grips were installed, and once again doubting that he was an actual authority on ivory grips I don't see how cutting little notches in it would be something he'd use to validate or disprove them being ivory, I'd think that a little shard of white plastic would look like a little shard of ivory.
      You can hear his driver talking about it in an interview right here on UA-cam, I believe it's that one channel called Veterans Center or something close to that, it's a great interview and the guy tells some really good stories about Patton in it.

    • @johncantrell8904
      @johncantrell8904 28 днів тому +1

      ​@@dukecraig2402the Colt letter on that Model P it came with Ivory Stocks.

  • @345Weeehrs
    @345Weeehrs 7 місяців тому +4

    Seen both of these at the museum, you know you're looking at history.

  • @santamanone
    @santamanone Рік тому +3

    The Colt Peacemaker did not win the west. That was done with single shot muzzle loaders and breech loaders. The Peacemaker is the gun. that tamed” the west.

  • @frankbutta9344
    @frankbutta9344 Рік тому +2

    George C. Scott’s portrayal of General Patton is overblown, and fails to depict the nature of Patton’s speaking voice and style. Omar Bradley did not like Patton, and Francis Ford Coppola drew heavily on Bradley’s memoirs when doing the movie’s screenplay.

  • @janemarkham4133
    @janemarkham4133 Місяць тому +2

    " RIP " GENERAL!!!! A GREAT VIDEO FOR A GREAT MAN & HIS BEAUTIFUL GUNS!!!!😊❤🤍💙🤟🤘👍👍👍👍🙏💪

  • @BrokenBarBox
    @BrokenBarBox Рік тому +6

    Please post the Jeff Cooper interview!

  • @maxartusy6378
    @maxartusy6378 Місяць тому +2

    As a boy, Patton sat at the knee of John Singleton Mosby, the "Gray Ghost". Mosby taught Patton how to fight and had direct bearing on Patton's methods. Mosby taught Georgie how to fight.

  • @joeguzman3558
    @joeguzman3558 Рік тому +4

    I just subscribed, may God give you millions of New subscribers.

  • @shawnmanley9007
    @shawnmanley9007 Місяць тому +2

    Every time when I watch this video, I feel a connection to those two guns, and I don't know why

  • @jimmyrhodes1808
    @jimmyrhodes1808 28 днів тому +2

    Tank Commander (?)- wonder what Patton would have to say about that ?

  • @johnroper3077
    @johnroper3077 Рік тому +5

    Heck, you guys have got me wantin' to watch the movie again now! I'm gonna' have to wait til' after the Marine Corps birthday.

  • @alanniederlitz8630
    @alanniederlitz8630 10 місяців тому +2

    Patton was amazingly complicated.

  • @docmach8794
    @docmach8794 Рік тому +4

    There was an interview of one of his drivers in Germany who said he was the one to get the grips done for one of his pistols, but he said they were faux ivory and actually made of plastic.

  • @joshuagibson2520
    @joshuagibson2520 Рік тому +2

    Love me some Shooting USA, but fuck cable / satellite TV channels. That shit is dead.

  • @pb68slab18
    @pb68slab18 4 місяці тому +2

    I do believe a Model of 1917 belongs on that wall!

  • @kafakafaa3950
    @kafakafaa3950 Рік тому +5

    A shame that none of these guns could protect him from his own people :D :D :D

    • @shooterqqqq
      @shooterqqqq Рік тому

      He died in a fluke car accident.

    • @kafakafaa3950
      @kafakafaa3950 Рік тому

      @@shooterqqqq clear thing :D

    • @F_Yale
      @F_Yale Рік тому

      @@shooterqqqq Flukes tend to happen when you say the wrong things, don't they.

    • @DennyRice
      @DennyRice 7 днів тому

      He and a friend were going hunting in his command car when he was struck by a truck on the way to the site, his neck was broken he lived for days before compications set in and took his life. The US Army could use a couple Generals like Patton today.

  • @jasonarringotn2501
    @jasonarringotn2501 Рік тому +3

    Amazing

  • @novascotianinfj
    @novascotianinfj Рік тому +2

    Fathom Paton today with his .500 S&W Magnums

  • @glocksp80smd
    @glocksp80smd Рік тому +1

    That .357 isnt in good shape ive seen others that old in way better shape but saying thay im sure he carried the hell out of that in alot of different conditions

  • @markosterman419
    @markosterman419 Рік тому +1

    LOL … did he engraving and carving the ivory grips? Wish he could have found the same guy who did the metal engraving.

  • @michaelwilson9986
    @michaelwilson9986 3 місяці тому +1

    There an Uncut possibility?

  • @joshuamontgomery4992
    @joshuamontgomery4992 Рік тому +4

    He was also part of the Huron mountain club, his wifes father started the club and owned most of upper peninsula Michigan

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому

      As a Michigan native I never knew this! Thank you and Patton is my favorite General.

    • @joshuamontgomery4992
      @joshuamontgomery4992 Рік тому

      @@djquinn11 Fredrick Ayer was able to dredge the water way and got a bunch of land. The Ayer family still has a logging business up north.
      He hired John Munro longyear to "land look" for him, timber cruiser.
      Longyear has lots of logging and real estate business still up here.
      They are tied to the league of nations, now the UN. Among the other federal agencies.
      The Jekyll island was closed down, where did they go?
      Rockefeller I think it was gave longyear a big check.
      The club members owned everything to do with mining up here, aside from kenacot eagle mine the one they tried to shut down haha

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому

      @@joshuamontgomery4992 : Thanks for that. My grandfather had a hunting lodge in Paradise and I’ve camped and hiked all over the UP.

  • @JacobC479
    @JacobC479 Рік тому +1

    Only thing I think about is Patton was known for being super strict on soldiers having everything on them regulation but didn’t carry a regulation side arm.

  • @kraaidievoel
    @kraaidievoel Рік тому +2

    Thanks, this was great

  • @DymondzTrucking1962
    @DymondzTrucking1962 Рік тому +1

    His boys as Patton always referred to them would go to hell and kill the devil if he asked.

  • @RaulRodriguez-bq4nj
    @RaulRodriguez-bq4nj Місяць тому +1

    Why was Pancho Villa an outlaw?

  • @FINNIUSORION
    @FINNIUSORION Рік тому +1

    Good content but delivered like a mid 90s opb special.

  • @wizardofahhhs759
    @wizardofahhhs759 Рік тому +8

    And all this time I was under the impression that Patton carried a Glock.

  • @justindearmond1
    @justindearmond1 Рік тому +1

    i wonder if he ever fired his weapons in combat in ww2....killed enemy soldiers? Im a painter and we painted his house on Ft. Riley (number 5B) back in 07. was a really cool house, huge...still has his original furniture.

    • @stephenmccartneyst3ph3nm85
      @stephenmccartneyst3ph3nm85 Рік тому

      Two donkeys. In Sicily, Patton shot two donkeys on a bridge that were in his way. When the poor peasant farmer complained, the rich soldier boy proceeded to beat the man with a cane. Patton was an awful excuse for a human being.

  • @SPMech1
    @SPMech1 Рік тому +2

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @joshuagibson2520
    @joshuagibson2520 Рік тому +1

    I miss old man Scoutten.

  • @billpotter7162
    @billpotter7162 6 місяців тому +2

    My uncle James served in Pattons 3rd Army. That SAA most definitely looks like something a pimp would carry

  • @shaunsteele4968
    @shaunsteele4968 7 місяців тому +1

    That museum is not home to the Patton staff car. It's with Jimmy Hoffas body wherever ike chose to dump it. What you have there. Is a replica. With a filed off VIN number.

  • @bob733333
    @bob733333 Рік тому +13

    "We fought the wrong enemy" GS Patton

    • @team_dpi3621
      @team_dpi3621 Рік тому +4

      Absolutely correct!

    • @thinghammer
      @thinghammer Рік тому

      Of course, you're a Holocaust denier. Only people who believe that the Holocaust was fake think we fought the wrong people. That's how you meant it. He wasn't a fan of the Russians, either. That's what he was saying. Not fuck the Jews.

    • @bob733333
      @bob733333 Рік тому

      @@thinghammer I question everything that is presented to me. Including your comment. You can't prove anything you saw on the boob tube.

    • @bob733333
      @bob733333 Рік тому

      @@thinghammer Have you ever read Revelation of Jesus Christ?

    • @bob733333
      @bob733333 Рік тому +1

      @@thinghammer Why did he say we fought the wrong enemy then? Have you even thought about it?

  • @Fartboy420
    @Fartboy420 3 місяці тому +3

    60$ dollars!?

    • @GOF313
      @GOF313 12 днів тому

      That's a lot of money back then.

  • @gunbuilder69
    @gunbuilder69 Рік тому +5

    Cool spot, Nice Colt. Patton was never tank commander. he was actually a crap leader and a poor tactician. Carry on!

    • @shooterqqqq
      @shooterqqqq Рік тому +1

      Military experts say differently.

    • @stephenmccartneyst3ph3nm85
      @stephenmccartneyst3ph3nm85 Рік тому

      @@shooterqqqq no, they don't. He was a very ordinary General, easily the most over-rated of WW2.

    • @bobanderson6656
      @bobanderson6656 29 днів тому

      Oh, geez! He was the general the Germans feared the most.

    • @DennyRice
      @DennyRice 7 днів тому

      All NAZI's say that...