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ARTV—IHTOG: Winchester 1895 (.30 U.S. Army)

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A Ruger Mark I with a 6.87″ Heavy Barrel in .22 LR

Ruger Mark I 6.87
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Lewis machine gun: “Belgian rattlesnake”

Lewis machine gun: "Belgian rattlesnake"
As you can see, the Lewis machine gun was even used by the Empire’s stormtroopers in their “star wars” with the rebels, and it could not be better advertised! Frame from the IV series of the epic “New Hope”
“I want to ask to be transferred to the machine gun team. — Are you familiar with the machine gun? — I know the systems of Shosh, Berthier, Madsen, Maxim, Hotchkiss, Bergman, Vickers, Lewis, Schwarzlose. – Wow! I’ll talk to the regimental commander.”
Mikhail Sholokhov. Quiet Don

stories about weapons. The machine gun, which will be discussed today, was designed by Colonel of the American Army Isaac Newton Lewis in 1911, while he used the developments of Samuel McLean. But here, between General William Crozier, the head of the US artillery department, and Isaac Lewis, as they say, “a black cat ran”, and the American army did not receive a machine gun then. Lewis himself was offended and left the army.


Machine gun and spare discs for it. Photo forgottenweapons.com

In 1913, he moved to Belgium, and already there, in the city of gunsmiths Liege, he created his own company Armes Automatique Lewis. He began promoting his machine gun in Europe back in 1910. Then he sold the rights to it to the American company Automatic Arms Company of Buffalo in New York and the Belgian Factory National. The Belgians in 1913 produced a small number of his machine guns under the British .303 cartridge, and in 1914 he managed to sell a license for his machine gun to the British company Birmingham Small Arms (BSA). So for him, inventive activity ended in the best way: Lewis was paid a lot of money, and he became a very rich man. And then, together with his factory, he completely moved to England and ended up there just in time – literally on the eve of the German invasion.

With the outbreak of the First World War, the production of Lewis machine guns under the designation Model 1914 was deployed by the BSA company in Birmingham and the Savage Arms Company in the USA. It was officially adopted by the British Army on October 15, 1915.


Model 1916 machine gun. Royal Arsenal, Leeds

The main difference between these two designs was that the BSA weapons were designed for .303 British cartridges, while the Savage produced machine guns for .30-06 cartridges, which required certain alterations to the magazine, feed mechanism, bolt, barrel, extractor and gas operating system. But Savage also produced machine guns chambered in .303 British: M1916 and M1917, which were exported to Canada and the UK. A lot of machine guns fell into the US Army (although officially she didn’t take it into service!) And went to the naval the fleet. And later they were delivered to the UK under Lend-Lease during the Second World War.


Ammo feeding mechanism. View from above. Royal Arsenal, Leeds

Note that the creators of the machine gun fully took into account the love of the military for simple and technically advanced systems and made a truly simple and technically perfect weapon. Automatic machine gun had a gas drive. Part of the powder gases expanding after the shot was removed from the barrel and pushed the piston under the barrel back. The piston rod, which was included in the receiver, had a serrated thread, just like the Saint-Etienne machine gun. But it was located on its outer surface and rotated the gear wheel not inside it, but outside, located in front of the trigger guard in a characteristic tide. Interestingly, the return spring was located just inside this wheel, which made it possible to significantly reduce the size of the receiver. It should be noted that the return spring in the Lewis machine gun also had an adjusting device for changing the recoil resistance depending on changes in temperature and wear. As unusual as this decision may seem, the Lewis design turned out to be quite reliable and was then even copied by the Japanese and widely used by them during World War II.


Schematic diagram of the Lewis machine gun. On the left, its shutter is very well shown, and on the right, the piston rod with gear cutting and a protrusion with a striker

At the rear of the piston there was a vertical rack with a striker, on which a bolt was put on, hollow inside. When the force of the return spring returned the piston after firing and retreating to the rearmost position, the rack moved along the helical cam track in the bolt and rotated it at the end of its stroke, when it was at the breech. This allowed the three lugs at the rear of the bolt to fit into the slots in the receiver to secure the bore. And the fixed drummer at that time still continued to move forward and through the hole in the shutter mirror struck the primer.


Schematic diagram of the Lewis machine gun: Fig. 1. Bolt box; Fig. 2. Ammo feed lever; Fig. 3. Cartridge feed mechanism

But perhaps the most unusual part of this machine gun was the aluminum barrel casing, which forced the muzzle stream of powder gases to draw air out of it and thereby cool the barrel, on which an aluminum radiator with radial fins was put on from the muzzle to the breech inside the barrel. There was a discussion about whether the casing was really necessary, since during the Second World War many old aviation machine guns that did not have a casing-radiator were transferred to anti-aircraft units of the British militia on British airfields, and they all functioned perfectly without it.


Store device diagram

The Lewis machine gun used unusual open bottom disc magazines for 47 or 97 rounds. In such stores, the cartridges are held by the central disk by the nose, and they themselves are located inside in the form of a radial fan. There is no spring in such a store, and the supply occurs due to the fact that the cartridges simply fall into the machine gun as a result of mechanical action. So, the store at Lewis was driven by a cam at the top of the bolt, which, through a special curved lever, ensured the operation of the cartridge feed mechanism and at the same time turned the store itself.


Shop for 47 rounds. Photo forgottenweapons.com

The machine gun showed a rate of fire of about 500-600 rounds per minute, and an aircraft machine gun of 1918 with a recoil amplifier fired up to 800 rounds per minute. The version for ground use had a weight of 12,7 kg, that is, half as much as the Vickers machine gun, and was convenient in that only one soldier could shoot from it.

Already in the first days of the war, the machine gun was used during the defense of Namur, and it began to be issued to British infantry battalions in early 1916. At the same time, the heavier and less mobile Vickers machine guns were withdrawn from the infantry for use by a specialized machine gun corps. In early 1917, the US Navy and Marine Corps adopted the M1917 Lewis machine gun chambered in .30-06 caliber.


Store device for 97 rounds. Photo forgottenweapons.com

The machine gunners on the Western Front noted the “invulnerability” of the machine gun (it did not have a casing with water, which was easily penetrated by bullets and shrapnel, after which the machine gun failed), but were not too happy with the fact that they were continuously firing from it, shooting 12 stores in a row, impossible. Machine gunners were required not only to be able to shoot accurately, but also to maintain their weapons. So, it was necessary to completely disassemble it, and then, blindfolded, reassemble it correctly in just one minute, and this despite the fact that the machine gun consisted of 104 parts!

The machine-gun team consisted of seven people: two shooters No. 1 and No. 2 and five ammunition carriers. Accordingly, the tactics of the British infantry also changed. If earlier she went on the attack with chains, now a squad or a platoon, under the cover of a Lewis machine gun, fled to the nearest shelter, from where they covered the machine gunners running towards him with fire, after which everything was repeated. The Germans appreciated this tactic (as well as the machine gun!) And immediately adopted both. At the same time, they nicknamed him “] i] Belgian rattlesnake [/ i]”, which, perhaps, best of all characterizes his high fighting qualities.


Scheme of the machine gun “Lewis” from the patent

In 1917, the Russian Empire purchased 10 Lewis machine guns from the British government and ordered another 000 guns from the United States. The US government was unwilling to supply Tsarist Russia with these machine guns, and there is some doubt as to whether they were actually sent, although records exist that show that 10 Savage machine guns were delivered to Russia by March 000, 31. In any case, machine guns of this type during the years of the civil war in Russia were used by both whites and reds, as well as all kinds of nationalist formations.


Sometimes this machine gun was equipped with an additional carrying handle. “Lewis” Mk. I (1915-1942). Royal Arsenal, Leeds

to British Tanks Mark IVs were also supplied with these machine guns, as the military appreciated the compactness of their magazines. However, they did not take into account one circumstance! It turned out that the tank’s ventilation system leads to a reverse flow of air through the cooling jacket of the machine gun, as a result of which powder gases are blown directly into the shooter’s face during firing. Therefore, as soon as an improved machine-gun belt was developed for the Hotchkiss machine gun, the Lewis was immediately replaced by them on all later models of tanks.


Japanese model machine gun “Lewis” Type 92 (1932). Royal Arsenal, Leeds

The only serious drawback compared to the Vickers machine gun was the high price of the Lewis. It cost £165 in 1915 and £175 in 1918, while the price of a Vickers was only about £100. But the assembly of the Lewis was about 80% faster than the Vickers, not to mention the fact that it was much more portable. As a result, by the end of the First World War, the number of Lewis machine guns exceeded the number of Vickers machine guns in a ratio of about 3: 1.

To be continued …

Author:
Vyacheslav Shpakovsky
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Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad Leadership of the highest kind Soldiering War

The Death of Stonewall Jackson: Lee Loses His Strong Right Arm by WILL DABBS

Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson has been described by some historians as the finest General the United States ever produced.

Thomas Jackson’s great grandparents were criminals. John Jackson and Elizabeth Cummins were both convicted of larceny in England and were punitively dispatched to the New World in 1749 alongside 150 other convicts. On the voyage across the Atlantic, John and Elizabeth fell in love.

18th-century America was a rugged place.

Once their obligatory bond service was complete in 1755 they were married. Their grandchild Thomas Jonathan Jackson was born in 1824 in Clarksburg, Virginia. He was the third child of Julia and Jonathan Jackson. In his youth, Thomas went by the nickname “The Real Macaroni,” though the origins and significance of that term are not well understood.

Thomas Jackson’s commitment to the Confederacy created a schism with his sister that was never mended.

Typhoid took his six-year-old sister in 1826 and his father some three weeks later. The boy’s remaining sister Laura Ann was born the day after her father died. Thomas and Laura Ann were close as children, but Laura Ann ultimately sided with the Union. Thomas grew to become a Confederate General of some renown. As a result, their relationship remained fractured until his death.

Military Service

LT Thomas Jackson served in Mexico after he was commissioned from West Point.

Thomas Jackson entered the US Military Academy in 1842. Jackson’s lack of formal education hamstrung him upon his arrival at West Point, but his legendary dogged determination compensated. He graduated 18th out of 59 in his class of 1846.

Thomas Jackson was a driven instructor at VMI. His students frequently thought him overly demanding.

Jackson got his formal introduction to war in Mexico. As a young officer, he distinguished himself at Chapultepec. For a decade starting in 1851 he taught at Virginia Military Institute where he was unpopular with his students. Along the way he was twice married. His first wife died in childbirth. His second, Mary Anna Morrison, lived until 1915. When the South seceded in 1861 following the attack on Fort Sumter, Thomas Jackson threw his lot in with the Confederacy.

The affectionate moniker “Stonewall” Jackson stuck with him to his death.

In July of that year, Jackson commanded a brigade at the First Battle of Bull Run. At a critical moment in the fight, Jackson beat back a determined Union assault. Barnard Elliot Bee, himself a distinguished Confederate General who ultimately lost his life in combat, referred to Jackson as a “stone wall” in the face of the enemy. The name stuck.

General Thomas Jackson was veritably deified in the Confederacy.

After an initial setback attributed to flawed intelligence, Stonewall Jackson dominated the Shenandoah Valley campaigns of 1862. Through truly exceptional tactical acumen, Jackson and his troops defeated three separate Union armies in the field. He exercised his martial gifts at places like Harper’s Ferry, Antietam, and Fredericksburg, developing for himself a reputation as a cunning and insightful combat leader. At Chancellorsville Jackson’s 30,000 Confederates launched a devastating surprise attack against the Federal flank that drove the Union troops back fully two miles.

The General’s Theology

General Jackson prayed frequently with his staff and men. A truly pious man, Jackson was also acutely self-conscious and ever attempted to avoid the limelight.

Thomas Jackson has been described as a fanatical Presbyterian. His deep and sincere faith drove everything about his life while making him all but fearless in battle. He once opined, “My religious belief teaches me to feel as safe in battle as in bed. God has fixed the time for my death. I do not concern myself about that, but to be always ready, no matter when it may overtake me…That is the way all men should live, and then all would be equally brave.”

Stonewall Jackson’s arm was ultimately interred 115 miles away from the rest of him. The details are coming directly.

Like most exceptional personalities, Jackson was also a bit strange. He held a lifelong belief that one of his arms was longer than the other. He would frequently hold the perceived longer of the two aloft for long periods in an effort at equalizing his circulation.

Behold Stonewall Jackson’s kryptonite. The esteemed General purportedly loved these things.

General Jackson highly valued sleep and was known to fall asleep at times while eating. His prior service as an artillery officer had severely damaged his hearing. This made communication difficult at times. He also had an abiding passion for fresh fruit like peaches, watermelons, apples, and oranges. His real weakness, however, was lemons. When they could be found Jackson would frequently gnaw whole lemons in an effort at soothing his digestion. General Richard Taylor, son of President Zachary Taylor and a colleague, wrote, “Where Jackson got his lemons ‘no fellow could find out,’ but he was rarely without one.”

Stonewall Jackson and Slavery

One man’s hero is another man’s goat. Jackson’s dashing visage adorns the rock face at Stone Mountain, Georgia. Completed in 1974, this sculpture is so large that a grown man could stand in the mouth of the largest of the three horses. These three figures span three full acres across the mountainside.

No information age treatise of a prominent Confederate can be complete without dragging slavery and race into the narrative. In the late 1850s, Jackson owned six slaves. Three of these–Hetty, Cyrus, and George–were received as part of a dowry from Mary Anna’s father upon their marriage. Two others supposedly requested that Jackson purchase them based upon his purported kindly local reputation. Of the two, Albert was purchased and worked to gain his freedom. Amy served as the Jackson family cook and housekeeper. The sixth was a child with a learning disability who was received as a gift from an aged widow.

This is Major Jackson in 1855 when he taught Sunday School to local slaves.

In what was considered a fairly radical move for the day, in 1855 Jackson organized and taught Sunday School classes for blacks at his Presbyterian Church. Of this ministry, Pastor William Spotswood White said, “In their religious instruction he succeeded wonderfully. His discipline was systematic and firm, but very kind…His servants reverenced and loved him, as they would have done a brother or father…He was emphatically the black man’s friend.” I obviously cannot speak to what any of that was really like, but Reverend White was clearly a fan. Not diminishing the repugnant nature of slavery as an institution, but it was clearly a different time.

The Death of Stonewall Jackson

General Jackson fell victim to the fog of war.

After a wildly successful engagement against Joe Hooker’s forces during the Battle of Chancellorsville, Jackson and his staff were making their way on horseback back through friendly lines. They encountered sentries from the 18th North Carolina Infantry who mistook the party for Union cavalry. The pickets shouted, “Halt, who goes there?” but fired before receiving an adequate response.

General Thomas Jackson was considered invincible in his day.

Frantic remonstrations from the command group were answered by Confederate Major John D. Barry’s command, “It’s a damned Yankee trick! Fire!” During the course of the two volleys, Stonewall Jackson was struck three times.

Several of Jackson’s staff officers were killed in that final fateful exchange.

Two rounds shattered Jackson’s left arm. One ball entered at the left elbow and exited near the wrist, while another struck his left upper arm three inches below the shoulder. A third ball struck his right hand and lodged there. Several members of Jackson’s staff along with their horses were killed. The poor visibility and incoming artillery fire added to the confusion. Jackson was dropped from his stretcher at least once during the subsequent evacuation.

These ghastly things got ample exercise in the horrific field hospitals of the Civil War. Roughly 75% of amputation patients ultimately died.

Battlefield medicine during the Civil War was unimaginably crude in comparison with today’s state of the art. The standard treatment in the face of significant damage to an extremity was amputation. As there were no safe and effective anesthetics available these surgical procedures were typically fast, frenetic, and fairly imprecise.

This is the outbuilding where Stonewall Jackson died.

A Confederate surgeon named Hunter McGuire took the arm, and Jackson was moved to the nearby Fairfield Plantation for recovery. Thomas Chandler, the plantation owner, offered the use of his home. However, Jackson, ever concerned about imposition, insisted he be maintained in a nearby office building instead.

Civil War-era hospitals were truly horrible things.

The germ theory of disease had not yet come to drive battlefield surgery, so secondary infections of combat wounds were ubiquitous. Jackson developed a fever and pneumonia as a result of his injuries and succumbed eight days later. As the end approached he said, “It is the Lord’s Day; my wish is fulfilled. I have always desired to die on Sunday.”

This iconic photograph of Stonewall Jackson was shot seven days before his fatal injury.

General Jackson’s final words, uttered in a delirium immediately preceding his demise, lend further insight into the man’s character. Attended by Dr. McGuire and a trusted slave named Jim Lewis, his final words were, “Order A.P. Hill to prepare for action! Pass the infantry to the front rapidly! Tell Major Hawks…” Then he paused and uttered, “Let us cross over the river, and rest under the shade of the trees.” Stonewall Jackson then breathed his last.

The soft lead projectiles fired by Civil War-era arms inflicted truly devastating injuries.

The fatal bullet was ultimately recovered and identified as a .69-caliber projectile. Union troops in this area typically fielded .58-caliber weapons. The 18th North Carolina Infantry was most commonly armed with older larger-caliber muskets. This discovery sealed the suspicion that Jackson had been felled by friendly fire. This was one of the first incidents wherein forensic ballistics identification was used to establish the circumstances surrounding a violent death.

Most Civil War-era long arms were single-shot rifled muskets.

While the American Civil War ultimately saw the introduction of cartridge-firing repeating rifles like the Henry and Spencer, most combatants on both sides were armed with single-shot, muzzleloading rifled muskets of various flavors. Union troops had the luxury of greater standardization due to their more advanced state of industrialization, while Confederate units frequently had to make do with a hodgepodge of weapons. Regardless, in this particular circumstance, the science of ballistics told an unfortunate tale.

The Rest of the Story

The loss of Stonewall Jackson to friendly fire represented an incalculable blow to the Confederate cause.

Upon learning of his friend’s injury Confederate General Robert E. Lee wrote, “Could I have directed events, I would have chosen for the good of the country to be disabled in your stead.”

He sent this message to Jackson via a courier after his surgery, “Give General Jackson my affectionate regards, and say to him: he has lost his left arm but I my right.”

When told of his death Lee confided to a friend, “I am bleeding at the heart.”

Jackson’s service as Lee’s primary Lieutenant could not readily be replaced.

The Battle of Gettysburg took place a mere two months after the death of General Jackson. As any student of Civil War history will attest, Gettysburg was an iffy thing indeed. The entire outcome of the war potentially turned on a handful of decisions made under the most arduous of circumstances.

Lee was forced to fight at Gettysburg without his most capable subordinate. Stonewall Jackson was only 39 years old when he died.

Had Stonewall Jackson been at Lee’s side during the chaotic maelstrom of Gettysburg the battle might very well have turned out differently. Had Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia been able to take the day and subsequently march on Washington, Lincoln could have been forced to sue for peace on the steps of the White House at the point of a Confederate bayonet. Had that been the case our world would obviously be all but unrecognizable today. Sometimes the most momentous events turn on the smallest things.

Here is one of Stonewall Jackson’s monuments being dismantled, brought down by enraged social justice warriors who likely fancy themselves paragons of tolerance.

Ripping down historical monuments in a fit of emotion strikes me as viscerally unsettling. In 2001 the Taliban blew up the 6th-century Buddhas of Bamiyan and were rightfully reviled as a result. It really should be possible to appreciate historical figures without dogmatically embracing the causes they represented or obliterating the evidence of their existence.

For all have sinned, even in modern woke America. If left intact alongside contextual information these monuments could serve as object lessons to enlighten generations yet to come. If freedom from moral stain becomes a prerequisite for veneration then I fear we may be destined to become a nation bereft of monuments.

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A WALTHER PPK PISTOL in caliber .380 ACP

Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 2
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 3
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 4
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 5
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 6
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 7
Smith & Wesson WALTHER PPK PISTOL. 3, 6-ROUND MAGAZINES. FINE SHOOTER POCKET PISTOL--FREE SHIPPING .380 ACP - Picture 8

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Special Operators: Mossad, Israel

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Glock 20 Gen 5

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K31 Swiss Rifle

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Stevens Model 85A