| 
				Gun of the Month | 
			
			
				| 
				December | 
				
				
					  | 
				
					Colt 1903 Pocket Hammerless U.S. Property marked .32 ACP  
					- WB Inspected, British Lend-Lease | 
			
			
				| 
				November | 
				
				
				  | 
				Colt Woodsman Bullseye Match Target 
				- Owned by Marksman and Inventor Philip Judd, Butte, Montana. | 
			
			
				| 
				October | 
				
				
					  | 
				Colt 
				Model 1911A1 U.S. Army .45 ACP (ca. 1941) - one of the 
				earliest RS inspected pistols. | 
			
			
				| 
				September | 
				
				
					  | 
				Early Colt Woodsman First Series Model .22 LR -
		Woodsman 1st Series Target .22 LR 6.5" Blue, Serial Number 
		55070 (1927) medium barrel, owned by firearms inventor Charles J. Jolidon. | 
			
			
				| 
				August | 
				
				
				  | 
				Colt Model 1902 
				Military .38 ACP - Serial Number 35278, with Target Sights 
				and Factory checked Frontstrap, Backstrap and Trigger. | 
			
			
				| 
				July | 
				
				
					  | 
				Colt Model 1911A1 U.S. Army .45 ACP 
				Commercial/Military Variation | 
			
			
				| 
				June | 
				
				
					  | 
				Unique Cased Set of Two Colt Pocket Hammerless Models 
			Colt Model 1908 Pocket Hammerless .380 ACP sn 18279 &  
			Colt 1908 Vest Pocket .25 ACP sn 123591 
			Owned by Charles Michelson and Colonel Carroll E.B. Peeke | 
			
			
				| 
				May | 
				
				
					  | 
				Colt Model 1911A1 U.S. Army .45 ACP 
				Transition Model - early variation | 
			
			
				| 
				April | 
				
				
					  | 
				Colt 
				Model 1900 .38 ACP Sight Safety - late sight safety 
				variation | 
			
			
				| 
				March | 
				
				
					  | 
				Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless .32 ACP - Issued to Colonel Carl Rueben Dutton, USA | 
			
			
				| 
				February | 
				
				
				  | 
				Colt 
				Model 1908 Vest Pocket .25 ACP - Pre/Post-War variation in 
				the 409,000 serial number range with single line slide marking | 
			
			
				| 
				January | 
				
				
				  | 
				Colt 
				Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless .32 ACP - OSS issue to Army 
				Major Eric Lindgren Bark in Sweden during WWII |