
The National Firearms Museum
John Wayne
was one Western actor who towered above the competition. Born Marion
Morrison in Iowa in , his family moved to Southern California, and
the subsequent small roles in films from director John Ford were
where he first received billing as John Wayne.
The National
Firearms Museum is honored to have on loan several of the firearms
that were used by Wayne during his 50-year film career appearing in more than
movies. One of his first lms was “The Big Trail” (1930), and one of his sidearms
in that movie was a nickel- nished Remington cartridge conversion revolver, embellished
with “diamond” file cuts on the barrel. A matching nickel-plated
Remington double derringer is another of Wayne’s sidearms from that
early period. Much later, in the film “Big Jake” (1971), Wayne employed
a shortened American Gun Company doublebarreled shotgun that he referred
to as a “Greener”—a favored brand of side-by-side used by lawmen
in the Old West.
Each of these rearms
is a part of the exhibition “Guns West!” that opened in May at the National Firearms
Museum. Firearms from the famous and infamous on the frontier, guns of cinema
and television stars and arms of today’s Cowboy Action shooters are featured
in the museum’s William B. Ruger Changing Gallery.
The National Firearms Museum is open daily and admission is free (donations gratefully received). Arms enthusiasts of all ages are welcome. For more information, please call (703) 267-1600 or visit nationalfirearmsmuseum.org