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Lot 111

Sale 6312 - Arms, Armor and Militaria
Apr 30, 2025 10:00AM ET
Live / Cincinnati
Own a similar item?
Estimate
$10,000 - 15,000
Price Realized
$6,800
Sold prices are inclusive of Buyer’s Premium

Lot Description

Thomas Leech & Co Floating CS Staff & Field Officers Sword
American Civil War

31" single-edged, slightly curved spear point blade with 21.5" unstopped median fuller. Blade 1.07" wide at ricasso and stamp numbered 262 on obverse. Overall length 36.75" with a 5.75" cast gilt brass hilt with two branch guard and knuckle bow. A leather sword knot has been added to the knuckle bow. The letters CS are located in the face of the guard between the branches, oriented to read correctly from the front with the guard up, rather than down. Face of guard with cast rudimentary foliate decorations and pommel cap with weak leaf decorations. Cord wrapped wood grip covered in leather with thirteen wraps of twisted wire. The sword is accompanied by an incorrect period brass mounted, blued metal US 1850 Staff & Field Officers pattern scabbard that fits the sword well.

The Confederate arms making company of Leech & Rigdon had its origins in Memphis, TN when Thomas Leech moved to that city circa 1854 to establish a cotton brokerage. The firm of Thomas Leech & Company had four initial investors, Leech and his brother and two Englishmen involved in the cotton trade. As much of the south’s cotton was destined for English mills, this arrangement made good business sense. As the political rhetoric of the period continued to heat up, and the potential for the secession of southern states became more of a reality after the election of Abraham Lincoln in 1860, Leech began to organize his business to enter the military goods trade. To this end he sought out the assistance of Charles H Rigdon, who had relocated to Memphis from St. Louis in 1859 or 1860. Rigdon was a skilled machinist and scale maker and had the experience and technical ability to manufacture edged weapons, firearms and cast brass accoutrements. Early Leech & Rigdon production items are typically marked with the initial firm name of Thomas Leech & Co, with later Memphis production items marked Thos. Leech & Co Novelty Works Memphis, or Memphis Novelty Works, or sometimes simply Novelty Works. The firm produced a wide array of edged weapons, including cavalry sabers, officer’s swords for infantry and cavalry, short artillery swords, naval cutlasses, bayonets and a dizzying array of “Bowie” and fighting knives. They also produced cast brass accouterments like belt buckles and spurs and offered complete accoutrement sets like saber and sword belts. The firm eventually began to produce a .36 caliber percussion revolver based upon the Colt Model 1851 Navy. With the fall of the Confederate Forts of Henry and Donelson, followed by the fall of Nashville in February 1862, the firm started plans to relocate further south and away from encroaching Union forces. The decision was taken to relocate to Columbus, MS adjacent to the newly established Confederate Briarfield Arsenal. Soon the newly reorganized Novelty Works company, soon to be Leech & Rigdon after the partnership was officially consummated, was back making arms and equipment. The company continued to turn out a variety of arms and material for the Confederacy in their new location, but as the Union armies continued to push into the region, the firm moved again, along with the Briarfield Arsenal, to Selma, AL in the fall of 1862. Leech & Rigdon’s stay in Selma was relatively short-lived and by the spring of 1863 they had moved to their final location, Greensboro, GA. Here they continued to manufacture arms and accouterments until the Leech & Rigdon partnership was officially dissolved in January of 1864. A few days later, a new partnership between Rigdon and J.A. Ansley, Smith and Charles Keen established the relatively short-lived firm of Rigdon, Ansley & Co. Rigdon & Ansley relocated to Augusta, GA and there manufactured a few hundred Rigdon & Ansley revolvers before the end of the war in April of 1865.

From the Bill Beard Collection

This lot is located in Cincinnati.

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