- Photo:
- Carol M. Highsmith
- Wikimedia Commons
- Public Domain
Famous Assassination Weapons From History
Single-Shot .44 Caliber Philadelphia Derringer
- Photo:
- Carol M. Highsmith
- Wikimedia Commons
- Public Domain
Despite being less than six inches long, the Derringer used by John Wilkes Booth to assassinate Abraham Lincoln was a hugely powerful weapon, known as a "pocket cannon." Booth was able to hide it in his pocket until the fateful moment where he shot Lincoln in the head.
It's currently on display in the basement of Ford's Theater in Washington, DC.
- Photo:
Webley British Bulldog .442 Revolver
- Photo:
- Smithsonian photographer
- Wikimedia Commons
- Public Domain
Deranged lawyer and office-seeker Charles Guiteau shot and killed President James Garfield on July 2, 1881, with a Webley British Bulldog .442 revolver. Guiteau spent $10 on the pistol and bullets, and originally wanted a Webley with ivory grips, as he felt it would be more attractive in a museum.
Following Guiteau's trial, the Webley was placed in the Smithsonian, but disappeared soon after.
- Photo:
FN Model 1910
- Photo:
- Judson Guns
- Wikimedia Commons
- CC-BY-SA 3.0
Designed by John Browning and made in Belgium, the 9 millimeter FN Model 1910 was the pistol used by Serbian national Gavrilo Princip to shoot and kill Archduke Franz Ferdinand, kicking off the complex chain of events that lead to World War I. After the shooting, the pistol found its way to a Jesuit priest and is now in the Vienna Museum of Military History.
An FN Model 1910 was also used to assassinate Louisana governor Huey Long in 1935.
- Photo:
6.5MM Carcano Model 91/38 Carbine
- Photo:
- Unknown/National Archives and Records Administration
- Wikimedia Commons
- Public Domain
Likely history's most famous individual weapon, the Carcano rifle used by Lee Harvey Oswald to assassinate President John F. Kennedy was made in Italy in 1940. Oswald ordered it from a catalog on March 12, 1963, and paid extra to have it fitted with a Japanese scope. It was found on the floor of the Texas Book Depository in the aftermath of the JFK assassination, and despite a Denver oilman's attempt to buy it, the gun is currently stashed in the National Archives.
The rifle is often improperly referred to as a Mannlicher-Carcano, after the manufacturer of the bullets used to kill Kennedy.
- Photo:
.22 Caliber Iver-Johnson Cadet Revolver
On June 5, 1968, Palestinian Arab Sirhan Sirhan assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy with a small .22 Caliber Iver-Johnson Cadet revolver. He fired three shots at almost point-blank range, and while it was initially hoped that the weak stopping power of the weapon would benefit Kennedy, he died 26 hours after the shooting.
The pistol became property of the LAPD and is now in the California State Archive.
.38 Caliber Revolver
First designed in 1898, variants of the .38 caliber revolver are among the most popular pistols in American history. They've also been used in a number of high profile assassinations.
Among the killings carried out with .38 caliber revolvers are the murder of John Lennon, the shootings of San Francisco Mayor Willie Moscone and Council Member Harvey Milk, the assassination of Indira Gandhi, and the second of the two killings by Lee Harvey Oswald (the shooting of Dallas PD officer J.D. Tippit). Oswald himself would be killed by a .38 caliber revolver, a Colt Cobra fired by Jack Ruby. In 1975, Sarah Jane Moore fired a shot at President Ford with a .38, but missed and was arrested.