Another outstanding feature! Thank you so much for keeping the memories of these men alive
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Our pleasure!
@dankingjr.2088Ай бұрын
Col. Askins and my grandfather were friends, both retired Army Colonels, and lived about 75 yards apart in San Antonio for 30 years. Had the opportunity to meet him once and get him to autograph my copy of Unrepentant Sinner. Very interesting guy.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
That's amazing!
@waltonsellers6941Ай бұрын
I have his book.....very informative, entertaining reading. Please keep these coming!!!!!!!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Thank you! Will do!
@chuckrf1502Ай бұрын
Me too! Signed copy.
@TheJHMAN1Ай бұрын
Askins, Jordan, and Skeeter some of my all time favorite writers. I am always amazed at that picture of Jordan holding a K frame Smith and it looks like a toy in his hand.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Yes, his hands were massive!!
@austinstuder1154Ай бұрын
Love what you're doing. Please consider doing pieces in Elmer Keith and Jim Cirillo
@garywemmer9342Ай бұрын
Let's hope so, in our time!!!!! Two masters!
@bayouman1901Ай бұрын
Especially Jim. Unknown outside a small circle.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
They are on our list for sure. Keith might be multiple episodes, so much information on him it's staggering!
@jeanbaptistevallee4500Ай бұрын
This was great, thanks for the quality content!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@dennisjohnson1546Ай бұрын
Another great video ! I have read his books and articles since I was a boy in the 1950’s ! Great stuff !
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@EricHeffnerАй бұрын
I had put it off for sometime finally got through all the gun books I felt were required ,and then bought “Unrepentant Sinner”much to my disbelief. He had signed the book, with some advise , “Keep your powder dry old stud” I have to smile to this day every time I think of that
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Fantastic! That's a keeper for sure!
@paulstuhrenberg9165Ай бұрын
Great and well done video! Thank you
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you liked it! Thank you!
@1972glmАй бұрын
Although he was known to carry a 1911, iirc he was a fan of the Colt New Service in both .38 special and .44-40. There's pictures of his with custom sights and a fitzed trigger guard. Also had a fully fitzed Colt New Service (bobbed and snubbed with the cut guard) that he mentioned using in a alley. Apparently he preferred Colts due to not liking how S&W salesmen were. Though he did like the S&W 39 in his later years
@LTArmsАй бұрын
We touched lightly on this in our "Creation Of the Fitz" video. It was custom-made for him by Fitz I believe. He did one for him and one for Rex Applegate. Rex's was a .45.
@ronaldjohnson147410 күн бұрын
At 77, after 31 years of military service, I certainly understand Askins' appreciation of shotguns.
@LTArms10 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@benlaubscher6371Ай бұрын
Love his book!!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Great stuff for sure!
@benlaubscher6371Ай бұрын
@@LTArms all of them Elmer Keith , skeeter Skelton,bill Jordan,jack O’Connor ,etc
@jasongibson8114Ай бұрын
Great video!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@cs2m12Ай бұрын
Thanks for doing a video on Col. Charles Askins. I must have read his article in the 1988 Hangunner Magazine 20 times growing up. As an adult, I finally bought "Unrepentant Sinner." I must have read it three times. The biggest turn-off was where he implied that he rigged a black subordinate paratrooper's parachute where it wouldn't work. However many gun fights he was in, that was chicken-shit. I guess the title implied that he was no one to look up to or emulate.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Definitely did some questionable things in his life.
@kr25flynАй бұрын
More of these videos. I find myself waiting for the next one to be released
@LTArmsАй бұрын
We love to hear that. We'll definitely keep them coming and appreciate the feedback!
@krobrosАй бұрын
What an amazing story, thanks!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! He did some crazy stuff in his time!
@JamesM-l5gАй бұрын
What group of people he kill where it was bleeped out in the video?
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Black folks and native folks, but he didn't use those exact words. Unrepentant Sinner is a really interesting book with a lot of crazy wars stories etc... but a bit on the heavy side as far as language for some people.
@Gerald-do9ygАй бұрын
I always enjoyed the writings of Col.Askins and I appreciate his many accomplishments and contributions! I certainly hope he made his peace with our Lord and is waiting in Glory! Blsgs, gg🙏🙏🙏✝️✝️✝️❤️❤️❤️🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🙋☝️☝️☝️
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Appreciate that! Thank you
@shadowwolf9503Ай бұрын
Ive heard it said that the Colonel was the first man to kill another man with the 44 magnum handgun. It happened in Vietnam. He killed a Vietnamese fellow while working as an advisor for the South Vietnamese Army.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
True story!
@SomeMookАй бұрын
The Vietnamese fellow had been sniping at Askins as he drove between bases. Askins found the snipers hide and waited for him. He recounted that the effect of the Magnum was quite impressive on his diminutive target. Askins, while not intimidated by the recoil of the .44 Magnum, felt that the recoil interfered too much with getting a good follow up shot on target.
@shadowwolf9503Ай бұрын
@@SomeMook Roger that !
@kevinward8915Ай бұрын
Have both Unrepentant Sinner and The Pistol Shooters book
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Great to hear. More need to read these!
@grassroot011Ай бұрын
Unrepentant, you say? Haa, bet he doesn't like his eternal destiny now.
@davidfox1726Ай бұрын
They DO note make them like this any more!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Agree 100%
@EddiePate-z3rАй бұрын
Would like to see John Wooters please 😊😊
@LTArmsАй бұрын
We'll add him to the list!
@MrPh30Ай бұрын
Good book it is , and I have a book he published via NRA , perhaps one of better fun books I come across . He speaks Much about his 8mm wildcats there . And many others he liked . He also hunted in then East Pakistan and the guides really liked him . And they were writing also reports in diplomatic journals for the President . There were many a high ranking person they wrote different about . That’s where he tried the first hunts of the 7mm REM Mag
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Definitely great stories told by him and those around him!
@MrPh30Ай бұрын
In the NRA book he writes about the rancher which lived close to his areas in the Apache territory. The saddle and rifle , the little .44-40 hang over the fence poles of a corral all year around , all kind of weather . In its scabbard , probably saw some oil once every year or so , but it always worked . Also about 8mm what he wrote about heavier 8mm like 230 -250 grain and solids just came to life last 15ish years ago .
@steveferris663Ай бұрын
One of the best!
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Absolutely!
@deafsmith1006Ай бұрын
Askins came at a time when men were men... instead of being metrosexual as they are now... I once, while helping conduct a scuba class on Possum Kingdom lake, had one of the students who saw my classic 2" S&W M&P .38 Special (not a big gun folks) and he wanted to see it. He looked at the 'huge' bullets and asked why I would need such a big bullet. Pitiful. And yea I still pack a .45 many days.. Glock 36. The old 1911 is just to heavy for me to drag around all day. And BTW... I read Cooper, Askins, and Jordan back in high school. And Massad Ayoob in SOF magazine while in collage (1975.)
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Kids these days! 😉
@jackgoodner6789Ай бұрын
Very entertaining.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@cliftonwhittaker260Ай бұрын
I used to read his articles in the gun magazines back in the '60s and '70s. He had some good stuff but was a bit of a know-it-all and I skipped through a lot of his stuff.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
A bit ;)
@cliftonwhittaker260Ай бұрын
@@LTArms Yeah, a bit. :)) Or maybe most of it.
@RTWMCАй бұрын
Colonel Askins was a man of his times. I personally have never seen any benefit of repentance. When a man makes a hard decision, he lives with it...done is done. He knew what he was writing about and laid it out in plain English. We all have our likes & dislikes regarding various guns, calibers & gauges...so be it! Very good video and a good wrap-up of his life.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Thank you! Appreciate the feedback and the watch!
@troyevans5670Ай бұрын
You left out alot of the "unrepentant " deeds.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Haha! KZbin isn't the biggest First Amendment supporter and is a pain with their guidelines, had to tip-toe the line and keep a lot of his colorful language, etc... to a minimum.
@daveeverett897Ай бұрын
Very good Life
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Definitely! Thanks for watching/commenting!
@finallyfriday.Ай бұрын
Sooo... he never was actually a Colonel but always a child.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
He was a Colonel in the Army
@finallyfriday.Ай бұрын
@LTArms the doc said he was promoted up to Major. Never indicated he was made a Colonel. Honorary?
@LTArmsАй бұрын
@@finallyfriday. He was actually brought back in at Major for Korea (a lower rank) but was Colonel during WW2. We should have clarified order of rank better, our apologies.
@finallyfriday.Ай бұрын
@LTArms thanks for the clarification
@skipper9400Ай бұрын
The "Colonel" was in truth the very Best of the Best......the things he did, fought, (and won), were truly the stuff of Legend, and made ALL the rest of the "Gun Writers " look like lace pantied wanna-bes by comparison....with the exception of Col. Jeff Cooper, who was on a par....RIP Charley......OnWard.........
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Yes, Cooper could hold his own for sure!
@jasongibson8114Ай бұрын
You got to do jack O'Connor 270winchester fanboy
@LTArmsАй бұрын
We did a video on O'Connor a couple of weeks ago ;) kzbin.info/www/bejne/fXWqq2tqoa-deJI
@raythompson5087Ай бұрын
Ole jr. was quite frankly a psychopath, and probably an alcoholic. Even his contemporaries describe his utter change in demeanor after only a few drinks, becoming almost homicidal.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
Definitely a bit of crazy
@KaththeeАй бұрын
Did any of them call him an Intel spook, because after looking at this video, it's pretty plain to me that he was, at least for a period of time. Intel spooks can be very creative writers, even when what they are writing about isn't supposed to be fiction, IYKWIM😉
@robertoservadei4766Ай бұрын
I read his books. He was a psycho murderer. Many of his kills were men that he ambushed and shot in the back
@murrismiller2312Ай бұрын
were they criminals ???
@SteveWagner-cb8ftАй бұрын
he was all that, guess he felt that if he had to deal with these folks, it would be only once
@jackmoorehead2036Ай бұрын
Face offs at high noon are just fiction writers ideals. You do what you have to so you can go home that night.
@bayouman1901Ай бұрын
If you find yourself in a fair fight, your tactics suck.
@LTArmsАй бұрын
He would fully admit to that I am sure!
@steveferris663Ай бұрын
AATW! Eighty-Deuce!
@scotth5261Ай бұрын
These videos would be much better if the narrator would read a bit slower instead of yapping away at 100 mph. Good content, poor delivery
@LTArms29 күн бұрын
We'll take that into consideration. Thanks for watching/commenting.