Originally Posted By: raptortrapper
They started calling it the "45 long colt" in order to distinguish it from the shorter "45 Schofield" that was used as an optional gun in the military. The two guns cannot fire the rounds fired in the opposite gun, even though both are "45". Therefore the distinction was made for the 45 Long Colt, and the name just kinda stuck.


The military had a way of manipulating and renaming rounds. There is a loooooot of good cartridge history out there in the 41 and 45 that is very interesting to me...


Duane


Democracy is two wolves and a lamb deciding what to have for dinner. Liberty is a well armed lamb
Benjamin Franklin