John Moses Browning's most famous Valentine's gift to gun owners was U.S. Patent 984,519 for a handgun later known just as the 1911.

The 15-page patent application, filed Feb. 17, 1910, included 38 points of claim and three sheets of drawings, building on Browning's previous 1897 patent (#580,924) for a magazine pistol. 

The patent was issued Feb. 14, 1911, and the rest, as they say, is history. 
 

John Browning Patent 984,519 drawing sheet
The profile is instantly recognizable. 
John Browning Patent 984,519 drawing sheet
As are the internals
John Browning Patent 984,519 drawing sheet
Functional art in 22 figures. 


While Colt first put the 1911 into production as the Government Model for both U.S. military and commercial contracts, other makers soon started producing the pistols during the Great War, a development that repeated itself with the updated M1911A1 during WWII, and unlicensed copies have been floating around since at least the 1920s. 
 

Kongsberg Union Switch M1914 Norwegian M1911
Some of the more rarely encountered 1911s include those made by Union Switch & Signal during WWII and the M1914 auto pistol made under license from Colt by Kongsberg for the Norwegian military. (Photo: Guns.com)


Today, most pistol makers both large and small have either keep a 1911-style pistol in their catalog, have made one in the past, or plan at some point to produce one in the future. 

Odds are the design still has another 111 years left in it.
 

Kimber rapide Eger
And they'll probably still make great Valentine's gifts in 2133. (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

 

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