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Lewis gun

The Lewis gun (or Lewis automatic machine gun or Lewis automatic rifle) is a First World War–era light machine gun. Designed privately in the United States though not adopted there, the design was finalised and mass-produced in the United Kingdom,[3] and widely used by troops of the British Empire during the war. It had a distinctive barrel cooling shroud (containing a finned, aluminium breech-to-muzzle heat sink to cool the gun barrel) and top-mounted pan magazine. The Lewis served to the end of the Korean War, and was widely used as an aircraft machine gun during both World Wars, almost always with the cooling shroud removed, as air flow during flight offered sufficient cooling.

Lewis gun
TypeLight machine gun
Place of originUnited States (design)
United Kingdom
Service history
In service1914–1953
Used bySee Users
Wars
Production history
Designer
Designed1911
Manufacturer
Unit cost£62 in 1918[2]
Produced1913–1942
No. built152,050 in World War II
50,000 chambered in .30-06
VariantsSee Variants
Specifications
Mass28 lb (13 kg)
Length50.5 in (1,283 mm)
Barrel length26.5 in (673 mm)
Width4.5 in (114 mm)

Cartridge
ActionGas-operated long stroke gas piston, rotating open bolt
Rate of fire500–600 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity2,440 ft/s (744 m/s)
Effective firing range880 yd (805 m)
Maximum firing range3,500 yd (3,200 m)
Feed system47- or 97-round pan magazine
SightsBlade and tangent leaf

History edit

A predecessor to the Lewis gun incorporating the principles upon which it was based was designed by Ferdinand Mannlicher.[4] The Lewis gun was invented by U.S. Army colonel Isaac Newton Lewis in 1911, based on initial work by Samuel Maclean.[5] Despite its origins, the Lewis gun was not initially adopted by the U.S. military, most likely because of political differences between Lewis and General William Crozier, the chief of the Ordnance Department.[6] Lewis became frustrated with trying to persuade the U.S. Army to adopt his design, claiming that he was "slapped by rejections from ignorant hacks",[7] and retired from the army.

Lewis left the United States in 1913 and went to Belgium, where he established the Armes Automatique Lewis company in Liège to facilitate commercial production of the gun.[8] Lewis had been working closely with British arms manufacturer the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited (BSA) in an effort to overcome some of the production difficulties of the weapon.[5] The Belgians bought a small number of Lewis guns in 1913, using the .303 British round and, in 1914, BSA purchased a licence to manufacture the Lewis machine gun in England, which resulted in Lewis receiving significant royalty payments and becoming very wealthy.[7] Lewis and his factory moved to England before 1914, away from possible seizure in the event of a German invasion.[9]

The onset of the First World War increased demand for the Lewis gun, and BSA began production, under the designation "Model 1914". The design was officially approved for service on 15 October 1915 under the designation "Gun, Lewis, .303-cal."[10] No Lewis guns were produced in Belgium during the war;[11] all manufacture was carried out by BSA in England and the Savage Arms Company in the US.[12]

Production edit

The Lewis was produced by BSA and Savage Arms during the war, and although the two versions were largely similar, enough differences existed to stop them being completely interchangeable, although this had been rectified by the time of the Second World War.[13]

The major difference between the two designs was that the BSA weapons were chambered for .303 British ammunition, whereas the Savage guns were chambered for .30-06 cartridges, which necessitated some difference in the magazine, feed mechanism, bolt, barrel, extractors, and gas operation system.[12] Savage did make Lewis guns in .303 British calibre, though. The Model 1916 and Model 1917 were exported to Canada and the United Kingdom, and a few were supplied to the US military, particularly the Navy.[12] The Savage Model 1917 was generally produced in .30-06 calibre. A number of these guns were supplied to the UK under lend-lease during the Second World War.[14]

Design details edit

The Lewis gun was gas operated. A portion of the expanding propellant gas was tapped off from the barrel, driving a piston to the rear against a spring. The piston was fitted with a vertical post at its rear which rode in a helical cam track in the bolt, rotating it at the end of its travel nearest the breech. This allowed the three locking lugs at the rear of the bolt to engage in recesses in the gun's body to lock it into place. The post also carried a fixed firing pin, which protruded through an aperture in the front of the bolt, firing the next round at the foremost part of the piston's travel.[15][16]

 
A Lewis gun at the Elgin Military Museum Canada. The rear end of its light-gray finned aluminum heat sink, which fits within the gun's brass-colored cylindrical cooling shroud, can be seen

The gun's aluminium barrel-shroud caused the muzzle blast to draw air over the barrel and cool it, due to the muzzle-to-breech, radially finned aluminium heat sink within the shroud's barrel, and protruding behind the shroud's aft end, running lengthwise in contact with the gun barrel (somewhat like the later American M1917/18 Marlin-Rockwell machine gun's similar gun barrel cooling design)[17] from the "bottleneck" near the shroud's muzzle end and protruding externally behind the shroud's rear end. Some discussion occurred over whether the shroud was necessary: in the Second World War, many old aircraft guns that did not have the tubing were issued to antiaircraft units of the British Home Guard and to British airfields, and others were used on vehicle mounts in the Western Desert; all were found to function properly without it, which led to the suggestion that Lewis had insisted on the cooling arrangement largely to show that his design was different from Maclean's earlier prototypes.[18] Only the Royal Navy retained the tube/heatsink cooling system on their deck-mounted AA-configuration Lewis guns.[18]

The Lewis gun used a pan magazine holding 47 or 97 rounds.[19] Pan magazines hold the ammunition nose-inwards toward the center, in a radial fan. Unlike the more common drum magazines, which hold the rounds parallel to the axis and are fed by spring tension, pan magazines are mechanically indexed. The Lewis magazine was driven by a cam on top of the bolt which operated a pawl mechanism via a lever.[16]

An interesting point of the design was that it did not use a traditional helical coiled recoil spring, but used a spiral spring, much like a large clock spring, in a semicircular housing just in front of the trigger. The operating rod had a toothed underside, which engaged with a cog which wound the spring. When the gun fired, the bolt recoiled and the cog was turned, tightening the spring until the resistance of the spring had reached the recoil force of the bolt assembly. At that moment, as the gas pressure in the breech fell, the spring unwound, turning the cog, which, in turn, wound the operating rod forward for the next round. As with a clock spring, the Lewis gun recoil spring had an adjustment device to alter the recoil resistance for variations in temperature and wear. The Lewis design proved reliable and was even copied by the Japanese and used extensively by them during the Second World War.[20]

The gun's cyclic rate of fire was about 500–600 rounds per minute. A recoil enhancer was added to the 1918 aircraft gun variant (and refitted to many 1917 models) which increased the rate of fire to about 800 rounds per minute. The ground use versions weighed 28 lb (12.7 kg), only about half as much as a typical medium machine gun of the era, such as the Vickers machine gun, and was chosen in part because, being more portable than a heavy machine gun, it could be carried and used by one soldier.[21] BSA even produced at least one model (the "B.S.A. Light Infantry Pattern Lewis Gun", which lacked the aluminium barrel shroud and had a wooden fore grip) designed as a form of automatic rifle.[22]

Service edit

First World War edit

 
Men of the 28th Battalion of the 2nd Australian Division practising Lewis gun drill at Renescure.

During the first days of the war, the Belgian Army had put in service 20 prototypes (5 in 7.65×53mm and 15 in .303) for the defense of Namur.[23]

The United Kingdom officially adopted the Lewis gun in .303 British calibre for land and aircraft use in October 1915.[24] The weapon began to be issued to the British Army's infantry battalions on the Western Front in early 1916 as a replacement for the heavier and less mobile Vickers machine gun, which had been withdrawn from the infantry for use by the specialist Machine Gun Corps.[25] The US Navy and Marine Corps followed in early 1917, adopting the M1917 Lewis gun (produced by the Savage Arms Co.), in .30-06 calibre.

Notes made during his training in 1918 by Arthur Bullock, a private soldier in the 2/4th Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, record that the chief advantage of the gun was 'its invulnerability' and its chief disadvantages were 'its delicacy, the fact that it is useless for setting up a barrage, and also that the system of air cooling employed does not allow of more than 12 magazines being fired continuously'. He records its weight as 26 lbs unloaded and 30+12 lbs loaded (though later he mentions that it weighed 35 lbs loaded), and that it had 47 cartridges in a fully loaded magazine; also that it was supported by a bipod in front and by the operator's shoulder at the rear.[26] About six months into his service, Bullock was sent on Lewis gun refresher course at La Lacque, and he recalled that the rigour of the training meant that 'everyone passed out 100 percent efficient, the meaning of which will be appreciated when I say that part of the final test was to strip down the gun completely and then, blindfolded, put those 104 parts together again correctly in just one minute.'[27]

 
Lewis Gun Manual used by Sgt. Don L. Palmer of the 25th Aero Squadron.

The gun was operated by a team of seven. Bullock was the First Lewis Gunner who carried the gun and a revolver, while 'The Second Gunner carried a bag containing spare parts, and the remaining five members of the team carried loaded pans of ammunition'. Bullock noted, 'all could fire the gun if required, and all could effect repairs in seconds'.[28] Bullock provides several vivid descriptions of the gun's use in combat. For example, on 13 April 1918 he and his fellow soldiers intercepted a German advance along the Calonne/Robecq road, noting 'we fired the gun in turns until it was too hot to hold'[29] and recording that 400 German casualties were caused, 'chiefly by my Lewis gun!'.[30][31]

The US Army never officially adopted the weapon for infantry use[18] and even went so far as to take Lewis guns away from US Marines arriving in France and replace them with the Chauchat LMG[32]—a practice believed to be related to General Crozier's dislike of Lewis and his gun.[33] The divisions of the US II Corps attached to the British Army were equipped with the gun.[34] The US Army eventually adopted the Browning Automatic Rifle in 1917 (although it was September 1918 before any of the new guns reached the front).[35] The US Navy and Marine Corps continued to use the .30-06 calibre Lewis until the early part of the Second World War.[36]

 
Australian soldiers firing at enemy aircraft during the First World War

The Russian Empire purchased 10,000 Lewis guns in 1917 from the British government, and ordered another 10,000 weapons from Savage Arms in the US. The US government was unwilling to supply the Tsarist Russian government with the guns and some doubt exists as to whether they were actually delivered, although records indicate that 5,982 Savage weapons were delivered to Russia by 31 March 1917. The Lewis guns supplied by Britain were dispatched to Russia in May 1917, but it is not known for certain whether these were the Savage-made weapons being trans-shipped through the UK, or a separate batch of UK-produced units.[37] White armies in Northwest Russia received several hundred Lewis guns in 1918–1919.[38]

British Mark IV tanks used the Lewis, replacing the Vickers and Hotchkiss used in earlier tanks. The Lewis was chosen for its relatively compact magazines, but the ventilation system inside the tank caused the airflow to be reversed through the Lewis cooling jacket, resulting in hot air and fumes being blown into the gunner's face.[39] As soon as an improved belt feed for the Hotchkiss was developed, the Lewis was replaced by them in later tank models.[40]

As their enemies used the mobility of the gun to ambush German raiding parties, the Germans nicknamed the Lewis "the Belgian Rattlesnake".[41] They used captured Lewis guns in both World Wars, and included instruction in its operation and care as part of their machine-gun crew training.[42]

Despite costing more than a Vickers gun to manufacture (the cost of a Lewis gun was £165 in 1915[10] and £175 in 1918;[43] the Vickers cost about £100),[35] Lewis machine guns were in high demand with the British military during the First World War. The Lewis also had the advantage of being about 80% faster to build than the Vickers, and was a lot more portable.[21] Accordingly, the British government placed orders for 3,052 guns between August 1914 and June 1915.[10] Lewis guns outnumbered the Vickers by a ratio of about 3:1.[35]

Aircraft use edit

 
Captain Charles Chandler (with prototype Lewis Gun) and Lt Roy Kirtland in a Wright Model B Flyer after the first successful firing of a machine gun from an aeroplane in June 1912.

The Lewis gun has the distinction of being the first machine gun fired from an aeroplane; on 7 June 1912, Captain Charles Chandler of the US Army fired a prototype Lewis gun from the foot-bar of a Wright Model B Flyer.[42]

Lewis guns were used extensively on British and French aircraft during the First World War, as either an observer's or gunner's weapon or an additional weapon to the more common Vickers. The Lewis's popularity as an aircraft machine gun was partly due to its low weight, the fact that it was air-cooled and that it used self-contained 97-round drum magazines. Because of this, the Lewis was first mounted on the Vickers F.B.5 "Gunbus", which was probably the world's first purpose-built combat aircraft when it entered service in August 1914, replacing the Vickers machine gun used on earlier experimental versions.[44] It was also fitted on two early production examples of the Bristol Scout C aircraft by Lanoe Hawker in the summer of 1915, mounted on the port side and firing forwards and outwards at a 30° angle to avoid the propeller arc.

The problem in mounting a Lewis to fire forward in most single-engined tractor configuration fighters was due to the open bolt firing cycle of the Lewis, which prevented it from being synchronized to fire directly forward through the propeller arc of such aircraft; only the unusual French SPAD S.A "pulpit plane" which possessed a unique hinged gunner's nacelle immediately ahead of the propeller (and the pilot), and the British pusher fighters Vickers F.B.5, Airco D.H.2, Royal Aircraft Factory F.E.2 and F.E.8 could readily use the Lewis as direct forward-firing armament early in the war. Some British single-engined tractor fighters used a Foster mounting on the top wing to elevate a Lewis gun above the propeller arc for unsynchronized firing, including production S.E.5/S.E.5a fighters and field-modified examples of the Avro 504. For the use of observers or rear gunners, the Lewis was mounted on a Scarff ring, which allowed the gun to be rotated and elevated whilst supporting the gun's weight.[45]

 
1918 Sopwith Dolphin with twin Lewis guns aimed upwards.

Until September 1916 Zeppelin airships were very difficult to attack successfully at high altitude, although this also made accurate bombing impossible. Aeroplanes struggled to reach a typical altitude of 10,000 feet (3,000 m), and firing the solid bullets usually used by aircraft Lewis guns was ineffectual: they made small holes causing inconsequential gas leaks. Britain developed new bullets, the Brock containing spontaneously igniting potassium chlorate,[46] and the Buckingham filled with pyrophoric phosphorus,[47] to set fire to the Zeppelin's hydrogen. These had become available by September 1916.[48] When combined with explosive Pomeroy bullets which ripped open the envelopes, they proved very successful, and Lewis guns loaded with a mixture of Pomeroy, Brock and Buckingham ammunition were often employed for balloon-busting against German Zeppelins,[49] other airships and Drache barrage balloons.[42]

 
A closer view of the Lewis aircraft gun and mount.

On the French Nieuport 11 and later Nieuport 17 sesquiplanes, a Lewis gun was mounted above the top wing (in a similar way as fitted to the British S.E.5a) – sometimes on a Foster mount, which allowed firing directly forward outside the propeller arc. The Foster mount usually incorporated an arc-shaped I-beam rail as its rearmost structural member, that a Lewis gun could be slid backwards and downwards along the rail towards the cockpit, to allow the ammunition drum to be changed in flight – but RFC fighter ace Albert Ball VC also understood that the Lewis gun in such a mount also retained its original trigger, and could thus be fired upwards. He used the upward firing Lewis to attack solitary German two-seater aircraft from below and behind, where the observer could not see him or fire back. It was his use of the weapon in this way, in a Nieuport, that led to its later introduction on the S.E.5/S.E.5a: Ball had acted in a consultant capacity on the development of this aeroplane. The later Sopwith Dolphin, already armed with twin synchronized Vickers guns just forward of the pilot and just above its V-8 engine, could also use one or two Lewis guns mounted on the forward crossbar of its cabane structure, between the top wing panels, as an anti-Zeppelin measure. A few of the Dolphins in use with No. 87 Squadron RAF in the summer of 1918, alternatively mounted their twin Lewises atop the lower wings just inboard of the inner wing struts for an additional pair of forward-firing machine guns; in such a field-achieved configuration, however, neither gun-jam clearing, nor drum magazine replacement were possible on their Lewises during a mission.

Lewis guns were also carried as defensive guns on British airships. The SS class blimps carried one gun. The larger NS class blimps carried two or three guns in the control car and some were fitted with an additional gun and a gunner's position at the top of the gasbag.[50]

Second World War edit

By the Second World War, the British Army had replaced the Lewis gun with the Bren gun for most infantry use.[51] As an airborne weapon, the Lewis was largely supplanted by the Vickers K, a weapon that could achieve over twice the rate of fire of the Lewis.

 
Recruits of the Singapore Volunteer Force training with a Lewis gun, 1941

In the crisis following the Fall of France, where a large part of the British Army's equipment had been lost up to and at Dunkirk, stocks of Lewis guns in both .303 and .30-06 were hurriedly pressed back into service, primarily for Home Guard, airfield defence and anti-aircraft use.[52] 58,983 Lewis guns were taken from stores, repaired, refitted and issued by the British during the course of the war.[53] In addition to their reserve weapon role in the UK, they also saw front-line use with the Dutch, British, Australian, and New Zealand forces in the early years of the Pacific campaign against the Japanese.[54] The Lewis gun saw continued service as an anti-aircraft weapon during the war; in this role, it was credited by the British for bringing down more low-flying enemy aircraft than any other AA weapon.[55] Peter White indicates that his battalion of the King's Own Scottish Borderers was still using the Lewis on Universal Carriers in 1945.[56] Royal Naval Commandos were also designated use of the weapon for their beach parties.[57]

At the start of the Second World War, the Lewis was the Royal Navy's standard close-range air defence weapon. It was installed on major warships, armed trawlers and defensively equipped merchant ships. It was often used in twin mountings and a quadruple mount was developed for motor torpedo boats. British submarines generally carried two guns on single mounts. Although it was gradually replaced by the Oerlikon 20 mm cannon, new corvettes were still being fitted with twin Lewises as late as 1942. Lewis guns were also carried by the Royal Air Force's air-sea rescue launches.[58]

 
A Royal Navy Motor Torpedo Boat with two twin Lewis gun mounts, 1940.

American forces used the Lewis gun (in .30-06 calibre) throughout the war. The US Navy used the weapon on armed merchant cruisers, small auxiliary ships, landing craft and submarines. The US Coast Guard also used the Lewis on their vessels.[55] It was never officially adopted by the US Army for anything other than aircraft use.[18]

The Germans used captured British Lewis guns during the war under the designation MG 137(e),[59] whilst the Japanese copied the Lewis design and employed it extensively during the war;[55] it was designated the Type 92 and chambered for a 7.7 mm rimmed cartridge that was interchangeable with the .303 British round.[60][61]

The Lewis was officially withdrawn from British service in 1946,[35] but continued to be used by forces operating against the United Nations in the Korean War. It was also used against French and US forces in the First Indochina War and the subsequent Vietnam War.[62]

Total production of the Lewis gun during the Second World War by BSA was over 145,000 units,[18] a total of 3,550 guns were produced by the Savage Arms Co. for US service: 2,500 in .30-06 and 1,050 in .303 British calibre.[36]

Variants edit

Canada edit

  • Model 1915. This was the designation given to .303 Lewis Mk I weapons manufactured for Canada in the United States by the Savage Arms Company. Large numbers of these guns were also produced by Savage for the British Army and in an aircraft configuration, for France and Italy.[63]
 
Czech Vz 28/L, chambered for the 7.92×57mm Mauser ammunition.

Czechoslovakia edit

Netherlands edit

  • Mitrailleur M. 20. In the Netherlands, the Lewis in both ground and aircraft versions was used in 6.5×53 mm R calibre, using a 97-round magazine only.[65] The infantry version was equipped with a carrying handle on a clamp around the rear of the cooling tube. After the German invasion of May 1940, the weapon was also used by Germany under the designation 6,5 mm leichtes Maschinengewehr 100 (h).[66] This Dutch modification of the older BSA redesign would have been extremely simple, as the Dutch/Romanian 6.5mm Mannlicher round has very nearly the same critical dimensions of the case head and rim as .303" British.

United Kingdom edit

 
A British Home Guard platoon in 1941. The soldier on the right is carrying either a Lewis Mk III* or Mk III** with the improvised skeleton stock and fore-stock to make it usable as a ground weapon. The man next to him is carrying the drum magazine.
  • Mark I. The .303 Lewis Mk I was the basic ground pattern model used by British and British Empire forces from 1915 with few improvements.[67]
  • Mark II. This was the first purpose built aircraft version of the Lewis, earlier versions had been improvised from Mk I guns. The cooling fins were omitted to save weight, but a light protective shroud around the barrel was retained. The wooden stock was removed and replaced with a "spade" grip, which resembled the handle of a garden spade. A 97-round drum magazine was introduced which required a larger magazine spigot on the body of the gun.
  • Mark II*. An improved Mk II with an increased rate of fire introduced in 1918.
  • Mark III. A further upgrade of the Mk II with an even faster rate of fire and the barrel shroud removed, introduced later in 1918.[68]
  • Mark III*. The British designation for the US .30-06 M1918 aircraft gun, some 46,000 of which were imported for the use of the Home Guard in 1940. These guns were modified for ground use by the replacement of the spade grip with a crude skeleton stock and the addition of a simple wooden fore-stock which would allow the gun to be fired while resting on a sandbag, or from the hip while advancing.
  • Mark III**. The designation for the .303 Mark III modified in the same way as the US M1918s.
  • Mark III DEMS. Intended for Defensively Equipped Merchant Ships (DEMS), it was similar to the Mk III** but with the addition of a pistol grip on the fore-stock, so that the weapon could be fired free-standing from the shoulder, from any part of a ship's decks.
  • Mark IV. After all the usable weapons had been reconditioned and issued, there remained a large number of incomplete Lewis guns and spare parts. These were assembled into guns similar to the Mk III**. There was a particular shortage of the fragile "clock" springs for the Lewis, so a simpler spring was manufactured and housed in a straight tube which extended into the skeleton stock. Many of these guns were fitted with a simple and light tripod which had been specially produced.[69]

United States edit

  • M1917 Lewis. Savage produced a version of the Lewis Mk I for US forces, rechambered for the .30-06 round and with a modified gas operation due to the greater power of the US ammunition. A few of these were modified for aircraft use, when intended for non-synchronized emplacements on an airframe. The US Navy designation was Lewis Mark VI and Mk VI Mod 1.
  • M1918 Lewis. A purpose built aircraft version of the M1917.

Experimental projects edit

A commercial venture in 1921 by the Birmingham Small Arms Company was a version which fired the 12.7×81mm (0.5-inch Vickers) ammunition, intended for use against aircraft and tanks. At around the same time, BSA developed the Light Infantry Model which had a 22-round magazine and a wooden fore-stock in place of the radiator fins and shroud; it was intended to be used in a similar way to the Browning Automatic Rifle. Another development was a twin Lewis for aircraft use in which the bodies of the two weapons were joined side-by-side and the drum magazines were mounted vertically, one on each side. None of these projects was accepted by any armed forces.[70]

Lewis had also experimented with lighter, 30-06 calibre, box magazine-fed infantry rifle variants intended for shoulder or hip fire as a competition to the BAR. They were dubbed "Assault Phase Rifle" – what could be understood as the first use of the term "Assault Rifle", despite the weapon being, by today's designation, a battle rifle. Despite being three pounds lighter than it and loaded with very forward-thinking features for the time (such as an ambidexterous magazine release), the U.S. Army still chose to adopt the BAR.[71]

A short-barrelled light machine gun variant was developed at the start of the Second World War. It came with a hand guard and was fed from a 30-round Bren magazines; however, it was decided by the British authorities to concentrate production on the Bren, which had the advantage of a changeable barrel.[72]

Influence on later designs edit

  • The German FG 42 paratrooper's rifle used the Lewis gun's gas assembly and bolt design which were in turn incorporated into the M60 machine gun.[62]
  • The Type 92 machine gun, the standard hand-held machine gun used by Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft gunners in WWII, was essentially a copy of the Lewis gun.[55]
  • The Russian PKP Pecheneg machine gun uses a streamlined version of the Lewis gun's forced air cooling in a fixed heavy barrel. This enables the Pecheneg to fire more than 600 rounds through the barrel without warping.[73]

Users edit

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Canfield, Bruce (October 2016). "1916: Guns On The Border". American Rifleman. National Rifle Association.
  2. ^ "Mr. Kellaway's Statement. (Hansard, 24 June 1919)".
  3. ^ Easterly (1998), p. 65.
  4. ^ Smith, Walter Harold Black; Smith, Joseph Edward (1960). "Small Arms of the World: The Basic Manual of Military Small Arms, American, Soviet, British, Czech, German, French, Belgian, Italian, Swiss, Japanese, and All Other Important Nations".
  5. ^ a b Skennerton (2001), p. 5
  6. ^ Ford 2005, pp. 67–68.
  7. ^ a b Ford (2005), p. 68
  8. ^ Hogg (1978), p. 218.
  9. ^ Huon, Jean (January 1997). "Le fusil mitrailleur Lewis (1ère partie)" [The Lewis light machine gun (1st part)]. La Gazette des Armes (in French). No. 273. pp. 23–26.
  10. ^ a b c Skennerton (2001), p. 6
  11. ^ Skennerton (2001), p. 7
  12. ^ a b c Skennerton (2001), p. 41
  13. ^ Skennerton (2001), pp. 15, 41–46.
  14. ^ Skennerton (2001), pp. 41, 47.
  15. ^ Ford (2005), pp. 68–70.
  16. ^ a b Smith (1943), p. 31
  17. ^ Springfield Armory photo of the M1918 Marlin gun with heatsink fitted 20 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ a b c d e Ford (2005), p. 70
  19. ^ Smith (1943), pp. 28, 32.
  20. ^ Smith (1943), pp. 31–32.
  21. ^ a b Hogg & Batchelor (1976), p. 27.
  22. ^ Skennerton (2001), p. 4.
  23. ^ a b Grant (2014), p. 11.
  24. ^ Skennerton (2001), p. 6.
  25. ^ Griffith, Paddy, ed. (1998). British Fighting Methods in the Great War. London: Routledge. p. 8. ISBN 978-0714634951.
  26. ^ Bullock, 2009, pp. 63, 64.
  27. ^ Bullock, 2009, p. 70.
  28. ^ Bullock, 2009, p. 64.
  29. ^ Bullock, 2009, p. 66.
  30. ^ Bullock, 2009, p. 69.
  31. ^ Barnes, A. F. (1930). The Story of the 2/5th Gloucestershire Regiment, Crypt House Press, Gloucester.
  32. ^ Hogg & Batchelor (1976), pp. 30–31.
  33. ^ Hogg & Batchelor (1976), p. 31.
  34. ^ Laemlein, Tom. Machine Guns of the American Expeditionary Force in World War I American Rifleman article. October 31, 1917. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  35. ^ a b c d Ford (2005), p. 71
  36. ^ a b Smith (1973), p. 270
  37. ^ Skennerton (2001), p. 46.
  38. ^ Khvostov, Mikhail (15 July 1997). The Russian Civil War (2): White Armies. Men-at-Arms 305. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-85532-656-9.
  39. ^ Fletcher, David (2007), British Mark IV Tank, New Vanguard 133, Osprey Publishing, p. 10, ISBN 978-1-84603-082-6
  40. ^ Glanfield (2001), p. [page needed].
  41. ^ a b c d Grant (2014), p. 64.
  42. ^ a b c Bruce, Robert (March 2000). . Guns Magazine. Archived from the original on 7 August 2009. Retrieved 12 February 2009.
  43. ^ Bullock, 2009, page 63
  44. ^ Driver, Hugh (1997). The Birth of Military Aviation: Britain, 1903–1914. The Boydell Press. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-86193-234-4. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  45. ^ Hogg & Batchelor (1976), pp. 27, 33.
  46. ^ ".303-inch Explosive". British Military Small Arms Ammo – Brock. from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  47. ^ ".303-inch Incendiary – Buckingham". British Military Small Arms Ammo. from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  48. ^ Leatherdale, Duncan (3 September 2016). "Leefe Robinson: The man who shot down a Baby Killer". BBC News. from the original on 3 September 2016.
  49. ^ Simpson, Alan (2015). Air Raids on South-West Essex in the Great War: Looking for Zeppelins at Leyton. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Aviation. p. 52. ISBN 978-1473834125.
  50. ^ Abbott, Patrick (1989). The British Airship at War 1914–1918. Lavenham, Suffolk: Terence Dalton Ltd. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-86138-073-2.
  51. ^ Grant (2014), p. 6.
  52. ^ Skennerton (1988), p. 58.
  53. ^ Skennerton (2001), pp. 46–47.
  54. ^ Skennerton (2001), pp. 7–9.
  55. ^ a b c d Smith (1943), p. 32
  56. ^ Peter, White (2002). With The Jocks: : A Soldier's Struggle For Europe 1944–45. The History Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-7509-3057-4.
  57. ^ Combined Operations Pamphlet No. 17, April 1943
  58. ^ Lambert, John; Ross, Al (1990). Allied Coastal Forces of World War II: Vol. 1, Fairmile designs and US submarine chasers. Conway Maritime Press. pp. 196–200. ISBN 978-0-85177-519-7.
  59. ^ Chant (2001), p. 47.
  60. ^ Smith (1973), p. 512.
  61. ^ Smith (1943), p. 131.
  62. ^ a b c d Skennerton (2001), p. 9
  63. ^ a b Grant (2014), p. 16.
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General references edit

  • Bullock, Arthur (2009). Gloucestershire Between the Wars: A Memoir. The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-4793-3. Pages 62–64, 66, 69-70, 85-86.
  • Chant, Christopher (2001). Small Arms Of World War II. London (UK): Brown Partworks. ISBN 978-1-84044-089-8.
  • Ford, Roger (2005). The World's Great Machine Guns from 1860 to the Present Day. London: Amber Books. ISBN 978-1-84509-161-3.
  • Glanfield, John (2001). The Devil's Chariots – The Birth and Secret Battles of the first Tanks. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 978-0-7509-4152-5.
  • Grant, Neil (2014). The Lewis Gun. Oxford (UK): Osprey. ISBN 978-1-78200-791-3.
  • Hogg, Ian V. (1978). The Complete Illustrated Encyclopedia of the World's Firearm. A&W. ISBN 978-0-89479-031-7.
  • Hogg, Ian V.; Batchelor, John (1976). The Machine-Gun (Purnell's History of the World Wars Special). London: Phoebus.
  • Skennerton, Ian (1988). British Small Arms of World War 2. Margate QLD (Australia): Ian Skennerton. ISBN 978-0-949749-09-3.
  • Skennerton, Ian (2001). .303 Lewis Machine Gun. Small Arms Identification Series. Gold Coast QLD (Australia): Arms & Militaria Press. ISBN 978-0-949749-42-0.
  • Smith, Joseph E. (1973). Small Arms of the World (10th Rev. ed.). Harrisburg PA (USA): Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-88365-155-1.
  • Smith, W. H. B. (1979) [1943]. 1943 Basic Manual of Military Small Arms (facs. ed.). Harrisburg PA (USA): Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-1699-4.
  • Textbook of Small Arms 1929 (repr. ed.). London (UK), Dural (NSW): Rick Landers: HMSO for War Office. 1999 [1929]. OCLC 4976525.
  • Townsend, Reginald T. (December 1916). ""Tanks" and "The Hose Of Death"". The World's Work: A History of Our Time. XXXIII: 195–207. Retrieved 4 August 2009.

Further reading edit

  • McCleave Easterly, William (1998). The Belgian Rattlesnake: The Lewis Automatic Machine Gun: A Social and Technical Biography of the Gun and Its Inventors. Collector Grade. ISBN 978-0-88935-236-0.

External links edit

  • Scans of Lewis gun manual of 1917
  • at Modern Firearms

lewis, lewis, automatic, machine, lewis, automatic, rifle, first, world, light, machine, designed, privately, united, states, though, adopted, there, design, finalised, mass, produced, united, kingdom, widely, used, troops, british, empire, during, distinctive. The Lewis gun or Lewis automatic machine gun or Lewis automatic rifle is a First World War era light machine gun Designed privately in the United States though not adopted there the design was finalised and mass produced in the United Kingdom 3 and widely used by troops of the British Empire during the war It had a distinctive barrel cooling shroud containing a finned aluminium breech to muzzle heat sink to cool the gun barrel and top mounted pan magazine The Lewis served to the end of the Korean War and was widely used as an aircraft machine gun during both World Wars almost always with the cooling shroud removed as air flow during flight offered sufficient cooling Lewis gunTypeLight machine gunPlace of originUnited States design United KingdomService historyIn service1914 1953Used bySee UsersWarsFirst World WarEaster RisingPancho Villa Expedition 1 Banana WarsFinnish Civil WarIrish War of IndependenceIrish Civil WarRussian Civil WarEstonian War of IndependenceLatvian War of IndependencePolish Soviet WarEmu WarChaco WarSpanish Civil WarSecond Sino Japanese WarSecond World WarKorean WarMalayan Emergency1948 Arab Israeli WarVietnam WarAlgerian WarDominican Civil WarNigerian Civil WarThe TroublesProduction historyDesignerSamuel McCleanIsaac Newton LewisBirmingham Small Arms Co Ltd Designed1911ManufacturerBirmingham Small Arms Co Ltd Savage Arms Co Unit cost 62 in 1918 2 Produced1913 1942No built152 050 in World War II 50 000 chambered in 30 06VariantsSee VariantsSpecificationsMass28 lb 13 kg Length50 5 in 1 283 mm Barrel length26 5 in 673 mm Width4 5 in 114 mm Cartridge 303 British 30 06 Springfield7 92 57mm Mauser7 62 54mmRActionGas operated long stroke gas piston rotating open boltRate of fire500 600 rounds minMuzzle velocity2 440 ft s 744 m s Effective firing range880 yd 805 m Maximum firing range3 500 yd 3 200 m Feed system47 or 97 round pan magazineSightsBlade and tangent leaf Contents 1 History 2 Production 3 Design details 4 Service 4 1 First World War 4 1 1 Aircraft use 4 2 Second World War 5 Variants 5 1 Canada 5 2 Czechoslovakia 5 3 Netherlands 5 4 United Kingdom 5 5 United States 5 6 Experimental projects 6 Influence on later designs 7 Users 8 See also 9 Citations 10 General references 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editA predecessor to the Lewis gun incorporating the principles upon which it was based was designed by Ferdinand Mannlicher 4 The Lewis gun was invented by U S Army colonel Isaac Newton Lewis in 1911 based on initial work by Samuel Maclean 5 Despite its origins the Lewis gun was not initially adopted by the U S military most likely because of political differences between Lewis and General William Crozier the chief of the Ordnance Department 6 Lewis became frustrated with trying to persuade the U S Army to adopt his design claiming that he was slapped by rejections from ignorant hacks 7 and retired from the army Lewis left the United States in 1913 and went to Belgium where he established the Armes Automatique Lewis company in Liege to facilitate commercial production of the gun 8 Lewis had been working closely with British arms manufacturer the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited BSA in an effort to overcome some of the production difficulties of the weapon 5 The Belgians bought a small number of Lewis guns in 1913 using the 303 British round and in 1914 BSA purchased a licence to manufacture the Lewis machine gun in England which resulted in Lewis receiving significant royalty payments and becoming very wealthy 7 Lewis and his factory moved to England before 1914 away from possible seizure in the event of a German invasion 9 The onset of the First World War increased demand for the Lewis gun and BSA began production under the designation Model 1914 The design was officially approved for service on 15 October 1915 under the designation Gun Lewis 303 cal 10 No Lewis guns were produced in Belgium during the war 11 all manufacture was carried out by BSA in England and the Savage Arms Company in the US 12 Production editThe Lewis was produced by BSA and Savage Arms during the war and although the two versions were largely similar enough differences existed to stop them being completely interchangeable although this had been rectified by the time of the Second World War 13 The major difference between the two designs was that the BSA weapons were chambered for 303 British ammunition whereas the Savage guns were chambered for 30 06 cartridges which necessitated some difference in the magazine feed mechanism bolt barrel extractors and gas operation system 12 Savage did make Lewis guns in 303 British calibre though The Model 1916 and Model 1917 were exported to Canada and the United Kingdom and a few were supplied to the US military particularly the Navy 12 The Savage Model 1917 was generally produced in 30 06 calibre A number of these guns were supplied to the UK under lend lease during the Second World War 14 Design details editThe Lewis gun was gas operated A portion of the expanding propellant gas was tapped off from the barrel driving a piston to the rear against a spring The piston was fitted with a vertical post at its rear which rode in a helical cam track in the bolt rotating it at the end of its travel nearest the breech This allowed the three locking lugs at the rear of the bolt to engage in recesses in the gun s body to lock it into place The post also carried a fixed firing pin which protruded through an aperture in the front of the bolt firing the next round at the foremost part of the piston s travel 15 16 nbsp A Lewis gun at the Elgin Military Museum Canada The rear end of its light gray finned aluminum heat sink which fits within the gun s brass colored cylindrical cooling shroud can be seen The gun s aluminium barrel shroud caused the muzzle blast to draw air over the barrel and cool it due to the muzzle to breech radially finned aluminium heat sink within the shroud s barrel and protruding behind the shroud s aft end running lengthwise in contact with the gun barrel somewhat like the later American M1917 18 Marlin Rockwell machine gun s similar gun barrel cooling design 17 from the bottleneck near the shroud s muzzle end and protruding externally behind the shroud s rear end Some discussion occurred over whether the shroud was necessary in the Second World War many old aircraft guns that did not have the tubing were issued to antiaircraft units of the British Home Guard and to British airfields and others were used on vehicle mounts in the Western Desert all were found to function properly without it which led to the suggestion that Lewis had insisted on the cooling arrangement largely to show that his design was different from Maclean s earlier prototypes 18 Only the Royal Navy retained the tube heatsink cooling system on their deck mounted AA configuration Lewis guns 18 The Lewis gun used a pan magazine holding 47 or 97 rounds 19 Pan magazines hold the ammunition nose inwards toward the center in a radial fan Unlike the more common drum magazines which hold the rounds parallel to the axis and are fed by spring tension pan magazines are mechanically indexed The Lewis magazine was driven by a cam on top of the bolt which operated a pawl mechanism via a lever 16 An interesting point of the design was that it did not use a traditional helical coiled recoil spring but used a spiral spring much like a large clock spring in a semicircular housing just in front of the trigger The operating rod had a toothed underside which engaged with a cog which wound the spring When the gun fired the bolt recoiled and the cog was turned tightening the spring until the resistance of the spring had reached the recoil force of the bolt assembly At that moment as the gas pressure in the breech fell the spring unwound turning the cog which in turn wound the operating rod forward for the next round As with a clock spring the Lewis gun recoil spring had an adjustment device to alter the recoil resistance for variations in temperature and wear The Lewis design proved reliable and was even copied by the Japanese and used extensively by them during the Second World War 20 The gun s cyclic rate of fire was about 500 600 rounds per minute A recoil enhancer was added to the 1918 aircraft gun variant and refitted to many 1917 models which increased the rate of fire to about 800 rounds per minute The ground use versions weighed 28 lb 12 7 kg only about half as much as a typical medium machine gun of the era such as the Vickers machine gun and was chosen in part because being more portable than a heavy machine gun it could be carried and used by one soldier 21 BSA even produced at least one model the B S A Light Infantry Pattern Lewis Gun which lacked the aluminium barrel shroud and had a wooden fore grip designed as a form of automatic rifle 22 Service editFirst World War edit nbsp Men of the 28th Battalion of the 2nd Australian Division practising Lewis gun drill at Renescure During the first days of the war the Belgian Army had put in service 20 prototypes 5 in 7 65 53mm and 15 in 303 for the defense of Namur 23 The United Kingdom officially adopted the Lewis gun in 303 British calibre for land and aircraft use in October 1915 24 The weapon began to be issued to the British Army s infantry battalions on the Western Front in early 1916 as a replacement for the heavier and less mobile Vickers machine gun which had been withdrawn from the infantry for use by the specialist Machine Gun Corps 25 The US Navy and Marine Corps followed in early 1917 adopting the M1917 Lewis gun produced by the Savage Arms Co in 30 06 calibre Notes made during his training in 1918 by Arthur Bullock a private soldier in the 2 4th Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry record that the chief advantage of the gun was its invulnerability and its chief disadvantages were its delicacy the fact that it is useless for setting up a barrage and also that the system of air cooling employed does not allow of more than 12 magazines being fired continuously He records its weight as 26 lbs unloaded and 30 1 2 lbs loaded though later he mentions that it weighed 35 lbs loaded and that it had 47 cartridges in a fully loaded magazine also that it was supported by a bipod in front and by the operator s shoulder at the rear 26 About six months into his service Bullock was sent on Lewis gun refresher course at La Lacque and he recalled that the rigour of the training meant that everyone passed out 100 percent efficient the meaning of which will be appreciated when I say that part of the final test was to strip down the gun completely and then blindfolded put those 104 parts together again correctly in just one minute 27 nbsp Lewis Gun Manual used by Sgt Don L Palmer of the 25th Aero Squadron The gun was operated by a team of seven Bullock was the First Lewis Gunner who carried the gun and a revolver while The Second Gunner carried a bag containing spare parts and the remaining five members of the team carried loaded pans of ammunition Bullock noted all could fire the gun if required and all could effect repairs in seconds 28 Bullock provides several vivid descriptions of the gun s use in combat For example on 13 April 1918 he and his fellow soldiers intercepted a German advance along the Calonne Robecq road noting we fired the gun in turns until it was too hot to hold 29 and recording that 400 German casualties were caused chiefly by my Lewis gun 30 31 The US Army never officially adopted the weapon for infantry use 18 and even went so far as to take Lewis guns away from US Marines arriving in France and replace them with the Chauchat LMG 32 a practice believed to be related to General Crozier s dislike of Lewis and his gun 33 The divisions of the US II Corps attached to the British Army were equipped with the gun 34 The US Army eventually adopted the Browning Automatic Rifle in 1917 although it was September 1918 before any of the new guns reached the front 35 The US Navy and Marine Corps continued to use the 30 06 calibre Lewis until the early part of the Second World War 36 nbsp Australian soldiers firing at enemy aircraft during the First World War The Russian Empire purchased 10 000 Lewis guns in 1917 from the British government and ordered another 10 000 weapons from Savage Arms in the US The US government was unwilling to supply the Tsarist Russian government with the guns and some doubt exists as to whether they were actually delivered although records indicate that 5 982 Savage weapons were delivered to Russia by 31 March 1917 The Lewis guns supplied by Britain were dispatched to Russia in May 1917 but it is not known for certain whether these were the Savage made weapons being trans shipped through the UK or a separate batch of UK produced units 37 White armies in Northwest Russia received several hundred Lewis guns in 1918 1919 38 British Mark IV tanks used the Lewis replacing the Vickers and Hotchkiss used in earlier tanks The Lewis was chosen for its relatively compact magazines but the ventilation system inside the tank caused the airflow to be reversed through the Lewis cooling jacket resulting in hot air and fumes being blown into the gunner s face 39 As soon as an improved belt feed for the Hotchkiss was developed the Lewis was replaced by them in later tank models 40 As their enemies used the mobility of the gun to ambush German raiding parties the Germans nicknamed the Lewis the Belgian Rattlesnake 41 They used captured Lewis guns in both World Wars and included instruction in its operation and care as part of their machine gun crew training 42 Despite costing more than a Vickers gun to manufacture the cost of a Lewis gun was 165 in 1915 10 and 175 in 1918 43 the Vickers cost about 100 35 Lewis machine guns were in high demand with the British military during the First World War The Lewis also had the advantage of being about 80 faster to build than the Vickers and was a lot more portable 21 Accordingly the British government placed orders for 3 052 guns between August 1914 and June 1915 10 Lewis guns outnumbered the Vickers by a ratio of about 3 1 35 Aircraft use edit nbsp Captain Charles Chandler with prototype Lewis Gun and Lt Roy Kirtland in a Wright Model B Flyer after the first successful firing of a machine gun from an aeroplane in June 1912 The Lewis gun has the distinction of being the first machine gun fired from an aeroplane on 7 June 1912 Captain Charles Chandler of the US Army fired a prototype Lewis gun from the foot bar of a Wright Model B Flyer 42 Lewis guns were used extensively on British and French aircraft during the First World War as either an observer s or gunner s weapon or an additional weapon to the more common Vickers The Lewis s popularity as an aircraft machine gun was partly due to its low weight the fact that it was air cooled and that it used self contained 97 round drum magazines Because of this the Lewis was first mounted on the Vickers F B 5 Gunbus which was probably the world s first purpose built combat aircraft when it entered service in August 1914 replacing the Vickers machine gun used on earlier experimental versions 44 It was also fitted on two early production examples of the Bristol Scout C aircraft by Lanoe Hawker in the summer of 1915 mounted on the port side and firing forwards and outwards at a 30 angle to avoid the propeller arc The problem in mounting a Lewis to fire forward in most single engined tractor configuration fighters was due to the open bolt firing cycle of the Lewis which prevented it from being synchronized to fire directly forward through the propeller arc of such aircraft only the unusual French SPAD S A pulpit plane which possessed a unique hinged gunner s nacelle immediately ahead of the propeller and the pilot and the British pusher fighters Vickers F B 5 Airco D H 2 Royal Aircraft Factory F E 2 and F E 8 could readily use the Lewis as direct forward firing armament early in the war Some British single engined tractor fighters used a Foster mounting on the top wing to elevate a Lewis gun above the propeller arc for unsynchronized firing including production S E 5 S E 5a fighters and field modified examples of the Avro 504 For the use of observers or rear gunners the Lewis was mounted on a Scarff ring which allowed the gun to be rotated and elevated whilst supporting the gun s weight 45 nbsp 1918 Sopwith Dolphin with twin Lewis guns aimed upwards Until September 1916 Zeppelin airships were very difficult to attack successfully at high altitude although this also made accurate bombing impossible Aeroplanes struggled to reach a typical altitude of 10 000 feet 3 000 m and firing the solid bullets usually used by aircraft Lewis guns was ineffectual they made small holes causing inconsequential gas leaks Britain developed new bullets the Brock containing spontaneously igniting potassium chlorate 46 and the Buckingham filled with pyrophoric phosphorus 47 to set fire to the Zeppelin s hydrogen These had become available by September 1916 48 When combined with explosive Pomeroy bullets which ripped open the envelopes they proved very successful and Lewis guns loaded with a mixture of Pomeroy Brock and Buckingham ammunition were often employed for balloon busting against German Zeppelins 49 other airships and Drache barrage balloons 42 nbsp A closer view of the Lewis aircraft gun and mount On the French Nieuport 11 and later Nieuport 17 sesquiplanes a Lewis gun was mounted above the top wing in a similar way as fitted to the British S E 5a sometimes on a Foster mount which allowed firing directly forward outside the propeller arc The Foster mount usually incorporated an arc shaped I beam rail as its rearmost structural member that a Lewis gun could be slid backwards and downwards along the rail towards the cockpit to allow the ammunition drum to be changed in flight but RFC fighter ace Albert Ball VC also understood that the Lewis gun in such a mount also retained its original trigger and could thus be fired upwards He used the upward firing Lewis to attack solitary German two seater aircraft from below and behind where the observer could not see him or fire back It was his use of the weapon in this way in a Nieuport that led to its later introduction on the S E 5 S E 5a Ball had acted in a consultant capacity on the development of this aeroplane The later Sopwith Dolphin already armed with twin synchronized Vickers guns just forward of the pilot and just above its V 8 engine could also use one or two Lewis guns mounted on the forward crossbar of its cabane structure between the top wing panels as an anti Zeppelin measure A few of the Dolphins in use with No 87 Squadron RAF in the summer of 1918 alternatively mounted their twin Lewises atop the lower wings just inboard of the inner wing struts for an additional pair of forward firing machine guns in such a field achieved configuration however neither gun jam clearing nor drum magazine replacement were possible on their Lewises during a mission Lewis guns were also carried as defensive guns on British airships The SS class blimps carried one gun The larger NS class blimps carried two or three guns in the control car and some were fitted with an additional gun and a gunner s position at the top of the gasbag 50 Second World War edit By the Second World War the British Army had replaced the Lewis gun with the Bren gun for most infantry use 51 As an airborne weapon the Lewis was largely supplanted by the Vickers K a weapon that could achieve over twice the rate of fire of the Lewis nbsp Recruits of the Singapore Volunteer Force training with a Lewis gun 1941 In the crisis following the Fall of France where a large part of the British Army s equipment had been lost up to and at Dunkirk stocks of Lewis guns in both 303 and 30 06 were hurriedly pressed back into service primarily for Home Guard airfield defence and anti aircraft use 52 58 983 Lewis guns were taken from stores repaired refitted and issued by the British during the course of the war 53 In addition to their reserve weapon role in the UK they also saw front line use with the Dutch British Australian and New Zealand forces in the early years of the Pacific campaign against the Japanese 54 The Lewis gun saw continued service as an anti aircraft weapon during the war in this role it was credited by the British for bringing down more low flying enemy aircraft than any other AA weapon 55 Peter White indicates that his battalion of the King s Own Scottish Borderers was still using the Lewis on Universal Carriers in 1945 56 Royal Naval Commandos were also designated use of the weapon for their beach parties 57 At the start of the Second World War the Lewis was the Royal Navy s standard close range air defence weapon It was installed on major warships armed trawlers and defensively equipped merchant ships It was often used in twin mountings and a quadruple mount was developed for motor torpedo boats British submarines generally carried two guns on single mounts Although it was gradually replaced by the Oerlikon 20 mm cannon new corvettes were still being fitted with twin Lewises as late as 1942 Lewis guns were also carried by the Royal Air Force s air sea rescue launches 58 nbsp A Royal Navy Motor Torpedo Boat with two twin Lewis gun mounts 1940 American forces used the Lewis gun in 30 06 calibre throughout the war The US Navy used the weapon on armed merchant cruisers small auxiliary ships landing craft and submarines The US Coast Guard also used the Lewis on their vessels 55 It was never officially adopted by the US Army for anything other than aircraft use 18 The Germans used captured British Lewis guns during the war under the designation MG 137 e 59 whilst the Japanese copied the Lewis design and employed it extensively during the war 55 it was designated the Type 92 and chambered for a 7 7 mm rimmed cartridge that was interchangeable with the 303 British round 60 61 The Lewis was officially withdrawn from British service in 1946 35 but continued to be used by forces operating against the United Nations in the Korean War It was also used against French and US forces in the First Indochina War and the subsequent Vietnam War 62 Total production of the Lewis gun during the Second World War by BSA was over 145 000 units 18 a total of 3 550 guns were produced by the Savage Arms Co for US service 2 500 in 30 06 and 1 050 in 303 British calibre 36 Variants editCanada edit Model 1915 This was the designation given to 303 Lewis Mk I weapons manufactured for Canada in the United States by the Savage Arms Company Large numbers of these guns were also produced by Savage for the British Army and in an aircraft configuration for France and Italy 63 nbsp Czech Vz 28 L chambered for the 7 92 57mm Mauser ammunition Czechoslovakia edit Vz 28 L 731 7 92 57mm Lewis guns formerly used by the Czechoslovakian infantry were modified to aircraft or anti aircraft machine guns by Ceska zbrojovka Strakonice 64 Netherlands edit Mitrailleur M 20 In the Netherlands the Lewis in both ground and aircraft versions was used in 6 5 53 mm R calibre using a 97 round magazine only 65 The infantry version was equipped with a carrying handle on a clamp around the rear of the cooling tube After the German invasion of May 1940 the weapon was also used by Germany under the designation 6 5 mm leichtes Maschinengewehr 100 h 66 This Dutch modification of the older BSA redesign would have been extremely simple as the Dutch Romanian 6 5mm Mannlicher round has very nearly the same critical dimensions of the case head and rim as 303 British United Kingdom edit nbsp A British Home Guard platoon in 1941 The soldier on the right is carrying either a Lewis Mk III or Mk III with the improvised skeleton stock and fore stock to make it usable as a ground weapon The man next to him is carrying the drum magazine Mark I The 303 Lewis Mk I was the basic ground pattern model used by British and British Empire forces from 1915 with few improvements 67 Mark II This was the first purpose built aircraft version of the Lewis earlier versions had been improvised from Mk I guns The cooling fins were omitted to save weight but a light protective shroud around the barrel was retained The wooden stock was removed and replaced with a spade grip which resembled the handle of a garden spade A 97 round drum magazine was introduced which required a larger magazine spigot on the body of the gun Mark II An improved Mk II with an increased rate of fire introduced in 1918 Mark III A further upgrade of the Mk II with an even faster rate of fire and the barrel shroud removed introduced later in 1918 68 Mark III The British designation for the US 30 06 M1918 aircraft gun some 46 000 of which were imported for the use of the Home Guard in 1940 These guns were modified for ground use by the replacement of the spade grip with a crude skeleton stock and the addition of a simple wooden fore stock which would allow the gun to be fired while resting on a sandbag or from the hip while advancing Mark III The designation for the 303 Mark III modified in the same way as the US M1918s Mark III DEMS Intended for Defensively Equipped Merchant Ships DEMS it was similar to the Mk III but with the addition of a pistol grip on the fore stock so that the weapon could be fired free standing from the shoulder from any part of a ship s decks Mark IV After all the usable weapons had been reconditioned and issued there remained a large number of incomplete Lewis guns and spare parts These were assembled into guns similar to the Mk III There was a particular shortage of the fragile clock springs for the Lewis so a simpler spring was manufactured and housed in a straight tube which extended into the skeleton stock Many of these guns were fitted with a simple and light tripod which had been specially produced 69 United States edit M1917 Lewis Savage produced a version of the Lewis Mk I for US forces rechambered for the 30 06 round and with a modified gas operation due to the greater power of the US ammunition A few of these were modified for aircraft use when intended for non synchronized emplacements on an airframe The US Navy designation was Lewis Mark VI and Mk VI Mod 1 M1918 Lewis A purpose built aircraft version of the M1917 Experimental projects edit A commercial venture in 1921 by the Birmingham Small Arms Company was a version which fired the 12 7 81mm 0 5 inch Vickers ammunition intended for use against aircraft and tanks At around the same time BSA developed the Light Infantry Model which had a 22 round magazine and a wooden fore stock in place of the radiator fins and shroud it was intended to be used in a similar way to the Browning Automatic Rifle Another development was a twin Lewis for aircraft use in which the bodies of the two weapons were joined side by side and the drum magazines were mounted vertically one on each side None of these projects was accepted by any armed forces 70 Lewis had also experimented with lighter 30 06 calibre box magazine fed infantry rifle variants intended for shoulder or hip fire as a competition to the BAR They were dubbed Assault Phase Rifle what could be understood as the first use of the term Assault Rifle despite the weapon being by today s designation a battle rifle Despite being three pounds lighter than it and loaded with very forward thinking features for the time such as an ambidexterous magazine release the U S Army still chose to adopt the BAR 71 A short barrelled light machine gun variant was developed at the start of the Second World War It came with a hand guard and was fed from a 30 round Bren magazines however it was decided by the British authorities to concentrate production on the Bren which had the advantage of a changeable barrel 72 Influence on later designs editThe German FG 42 paratrooper s rifle used the Lewis gun s gas assembly and bolt design which were in turn incorporated into the M60 machine gun 62 The Type 92 machine gun the standard hand held machine gun used by Imperial Japanese Navy aircraft gunners in WWII was essentially a copy of the Lewis gun 55 The Russian PKP Pecheneg machine gun uses a streamlined version of the Lewis gun s forced air cooling in a fixed heavy barrel This enables the Pecheneg to fire more than 600 rounds through the barrel without warping 73 Users edit nbsp Armee de Liberation Nationale guerrillas 74 nbsp Australia 75 nbsp Barbados 76 nbsp Belgium 23 nbsp Bermuda Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps 77 nbsp Biafra 78 nbsp Bolivia 79 nbsp British Hong Kong 80 nbsp British India 81 nbsp British Malaya 82 nbsp Canada 83 nbsp Ceylon 84 nbsp Czechoslovakia 64 nbsp Dominican Republic 85 nbsp Estonia 86 Kept in reserve in 1940 87 nbsp Fiji 88 nbsp Finland Small number captured from Russia and used during the Finnish Civil War also used in WW2 by air force and as anti aircraft weapons Designated as 7 62 pk Lewis and 7 70 pk Lewis 89 nbsp France 90 nbsp Empire of Japan Locally produced as the Type 92 and adopted by the navy 90 nbsp German Empire It is estimated that the Germans captured more than 10 000 Lewis guns in World War I Those were converted to fire 8mm Mauser in a special factory in Belgium 91 nbsp Guiana 92 nbsp Iraq by the time of the Anglo Iraqi War an Iraqi infantry battalion at full strength included 4 anti aircraft Lewis guns 93 nbsp Ireland 69 Used by Irish Republican Army in the Anglo Irish War amp Irish Civil War In use by the Irish National Army then by all services in the Irish Defence Forces Also used by the Provisional IRA amp Official IRA during the early period of The Troubles 94 95 nbsp Israel 41 nbsp Italy infantry variant modified to be used on aircraft 96 nbsp Latvia standard LMG during Latvian War of Independence and interwar period Used in both infantry and anti aircraft roles 8000 in stock by April 1936 62 97 Used by Latvian Police Battalions of WW2 98 nbsp Lithuania in the interwar period 99 nbsp Mauritius 100 nbsp Mexico 101 nbsp Nazi Germany The Wehrmacht captured a significant number of British and Dutch Lewis guns in 1940 and put these into service with second line troops as the MG 137 e and MG 100 h 91 nbsp Netherlands 102 nbsp New Zealand 103 104 nbsp Nicaragua 105 nbsp Norway manufactured before WWI 106 nbsp North Borneo 107 nbsp Northern Rhodesia 108 nbsp Philippines 109 nbsp Poland 69 nbsp Portugal 63 nbsp Republic of China Used by warlord armies 110 Between 1928 and 1930 Liu Xiang s army acquired 3 000 British Lewis Guns with 15 million cartridges 111 nbsp Romania 112 nbsp Russian Empire 41 nbsp Somaliland Somaliland Camel Corps 113 nbsp Southern Rhodesia 114 nbsp Soviet Union 41 nbsp Spanish Republic 115 nbsp Tibet 116 nbsp Transjordan 102 nbsp United Kingdom 75 nbsp United States 91 nbsp Vietnam 62 See also editDP machine gun Emu war FM 24 29 light machine gun Johnston Model D1918 machine gun List of U S Army weapons by supply catalog designation SNL A 11Citations edit Canfield Bruce October 2016 1916 Guns On The Border American Rifleman National Rifle Association Mr Kellaway s Statement Hansard 24 June 1919 Easterly 1998 p 65 Smith Walter Harold Black Smith Joseph Edward 1960 Small Arms of the World The Basic Manual of Military Small Arms American Soviet British Czech German French Belgian Italian Swiss Japanese and All Other Important Nations a b Skennerton 2001 p 5 Ford 2005 pp 67 68 a b Ford 2005 p 68 Hogg 1978 p 218 Huon Jean January 1997 Le fusil mitrailleur Lewis 1ere partie The Lewis light machine gun 1st part La Gazette des Armes in French No 273 pp 23 26 a b c Skennerton 2001 p 6 Skennerton 2001 p 7 a b c Skennerton 2001 p 41 Skennerton 2001 pp 15 41 46 Skennerton 2001 pp 41 47 Ford 2005 pp 68 70 a b Smith 1943 p 31 Springfield Armory photo of the M1918 Marlin gun with heatsink fitted Archived 20 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Ford 2005 p 70 Smith 1943 pp 28 32 Smith 1943 pp 31 32 a b Hogg amp Batchelor 1976 p 27 Skennerton 2001 p 4 a b Grant 2014 p 11 Skennerton 2001 p 6 Griffith Paddy ed 1998 British Fighting Methods in the Great War London Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 0714634951 Bullock 2009 pp 63 64 Bullock 2009 p 70 Bullock 2009 p 64 Bullock 2009 p 66 Bullock 2009 p 69 Barnes A F 1930 The Story of the 2 5th Gloucestershire Regiment Crypt House Press Gloucester Hogg amp Batchelor 1976 pp 30 31 Hogg amp Batchelor 1976 p 31 Laemlein Tom Machine Guns of the American Expeditionary Force in World War I American Rifleman article October 31 1917 Retrieved November 12 2020 a b c d Ford 2005 p 71 a b Smith 1973 p 270 Skennerton 2001 p 46 Khvostov Mikhail 15 July 1997 The Russian Civil War 2 White Armies Men at Arms 305 p 7 ISBN 978 1 85532 656 9 Fletcher David 2007 British Mark IV Tank New Vanguard 133 Osprey Publishing p 10 ISBN 978 1 84603 082 6 Glanfield 2001 p page needed a b c d Grant 2014 p 64 a b c Bruce Robert March 2000 The Lewis Gun Guns Magazine Archived from the original on 7 August 2009 Retrieved 12 February 2009 Bullock 2009 page 63 Driver Hugh 1997 The Birth of Military Aviation Britain 1903 1914 The Boydell Press p 126 ISBN 978 0 86193 234 4 Retrieved 27 November 2014 Hogg amp Batchelor 1976 pp 27 33 303 inch Explosive British Military Small Arms Ammo Brock Archived from the original on 18 September 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2016 303 inch Incendiary Buckingham British Military Small Arms Ammo Archived from the original on 18 September 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2016 Leatherdale Duncan 3 September 2016 Leefe Robinson The man who shot down a Baby Killer BBC News Archived from the original on 3 September 2016 Simpson Alan 2015 Air Raids on South West Essex in the Great War Looking for Zeppelins at Leyton Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Aviation p 52 ISBN 978 1473834125 Abbott Patrick 1989 The British Airship at War 1914 1918 Lavenham Suffolk Terence Dalton Ltd p 78 ISBN 978 0 86138 073 2 Grant 2014 p 6 Skennerton 1988 p 58 Skennerton 2001 pp 46 47 Skennerton 2001 pp 7 9 a b c d Smith 1943 p 32 Peter White 2002 With The Jocks A Soldier s Struggle For Europe 1944 45 The History Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 7509 3057 4 Combined Operations Pamphlet No 17 April 1943 Lambert John Ross Al 1990 Allied Coastal Forces of World War II Vol 1 Fairmile designs and US submarine chasers Conway Maritime Press pp 196 200 ISBN 978 0 85177 519 7 Chant 2001 p 47 Smith 1973 p 512 Smith 1943 p 131 a b c d Skennerton 2001 p 9 a b Grant 2014 p 16 a b Cs letecky kulomet vz L 28 Czech aircraft machine gun vz L 28 vhu cz in Czech Vojensky historicky ustav Praha cs Handboek voor den soldaat Vol 1 Breda Koninklijke Militaire Academie 1937 pp 36 49 Pawlas Karl R ed 2000 Das Lewis Maschinengewehr Waffen Revue in German Karl R Pawlas pp 33 36 Grant 2014 pp 14 15 Grant 2014 pp 17 18 a b c Grant 2014 p 63 Grant 2014 p 26 The Ingenious Devices of Colonel Lewis The Firearm Blog thefirearmblog com 18 November 2014 Archived from the original on 11 January 2018 Retrieved 27 April 2018 Grant 2014 p 42 Popenker Max 27 October 2010 Pecheneg Universal Machine Gun Modern Firearms Modern Firearms net Retrieved 7 July 2020 Windrow Martin 1997 The Algerian War 1954 62 Men at Arms 312 London Osprey Publishing p 9 ISBN 978 1 85532 658 3 a b Grant 2014 p 39 British Empire Colonies and Protectorates PDF Armaments year book general and statistical information Series of League of Nations publications IX Disarmament Vol A 37 1924 IX Geneva League of Nations 1924 p 123 Archived from the original PDF on 26 April 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2018 League of Nations 1924 p 126 Truby J David 1988 1977 The Lewis Gun 2nd ed Boulder Colorado Paladin Press p 195 ISBN 978 0 87364 032 9 Huon Jean September 2013 The Chaco War Small Arms Review Vol 17 no 3 Archived from the original on 19 August 2019 Retrieved 17 November 2018 League of Nations 1924 p 181 Sumner Ian 25 August 2001 The Indian Army 1914 1947 Elite 75 Osprey Publishing p 49 ISBN 9781841761961 League of Nations 1924 pp 185 187 Grant 2014 p 35 League of Nations 1924 p 179 Dale Ashley 7 July 2011 Arms of the Dominican Republic Firearms News Retrieved 4 December 2022 100 Years of Friendship UK and Estonia how it began Tallinn ukandestonia ee 2018 Archived from the original on 11 April 2019 Retrieved 24 October 2018 Andersons Edgars 2001 The military situation in the Baltic States PDF Baltic Defence Review 2001 6 113 153 Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2019 Retrieved 23 January 2019 League of Nations 1924 p 196 LIGHT MACHINEGUNS PART 2 Other Light jaegerplatoon net 13 May 2018 a b Grant 2014 p 44 a b c Grant 2014 p 65 League of Nations 1924 p 128 Lyman Robert 2006 Iraq 1941 The Battles for Basra Habbaniya Fallujah and Baghdad Campaign Oxford Osprey p 26 ISBN 1 84176 991 6 Moloney Ed Mitchell Bob The Bryson Incident and the Provisional IRA Magill Retrieved 10 April 2022 Cork Garry 3 March 2011 Weapons of the IRA 3rd West Cork Brigade The Irish War Retrieved 10 April 2022 Grant 2014 pp 16 18 Dambitis Karlis 2016 Latvijas armijas artilerija 1919 1940 g Vieta brunotajos spekos struktura un uzdevumi Artillery of the Latvian Army 1918 1940 structure tasks and place in the Armed forces PhD thesis University of Latvia p 225 Thomas Nigel Caballero Jurado Carlos 25 January 2002 Germany s Eastern Front Allies 2 Baltic Forces Men at Arms 363 Osprey Publishing pp 46 47 ISBN 978 1 84176 193 0 Dambitis Karlis 2016 Latvijas armijas artilerija 1919 1940 g Vieta brunotajos spekos struktura un uzdevumi Artillery of the Latvian Army 1918 1940 structure tasks and place in the Armed forces PhD thesis University of Latvia p 73 League of Nations 1924 p 193 Truby J David August 2011 Guns of the Mexican Revolution Small Arms Review Vol 14 no 11 a b Grant 2014 pp 63 64 Lewis light machine gun nzhistory govt nz Ministry for Culture and Heritage 15 July 2013 Stack Wayne O Sullivan Barry 20 March 2013 The New Zealand Expeditionary Force in World War II Men at Arms 486 Osprey Publishing p 44 ISBN 978 1 78096 111 8 Bickel Keith B 12 January 2001 Mars Learning The Marine Corps Development Of Small Wars Doctrine 1915 1940 1st ed New York Routledge p 188 ISBN 978 0 429 96759 7 Segel Robert G August 2014 The Lewis Gun Small Arms Review Vol 18 no 4 Archived from the original on 11 May 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2018 League of Nations 1924 p 177 League of Nations 1924 p 156 Grant 2014 p 76 Jowett Philip 10 September 2010 Chinese Warlord Armies 1911 1930 Men at Arms 463 Osprey Publishing p 23 ISBN 978 1 84908 402 4 Shih Bin China s Small Arms of the 2nd Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 2021 ed p 177 ISBN 979 8473557848 Romania in războiul mondial 1916 1919 in Romanian Vol I Documente Anexe București Monitorul Oficial și Imprimeriile Statului p 56 League of Nations 1924 p 172 League of Nations 1924 p 173 de Quesada Alejandro 20 January 2015 The Spanish Civil War 1936 39 2 Republican Forces Men at Arms 498 Osprey Publishing p 38 ISBN 978 1 78200 785 2 Chapman Frederick Spencer 1998 1936 Tibetan Lewis Gun section General references editBullock Arthur 2009 Gloucestershire Between the Wars A Memoir The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 4793 3 Pages 62 64 66 69 70 85 86 Chant Christopher 2001 Small Arms Of World War II London UK Brown Partworks ISBN 978 1 84044 089 8 Ford Roger 2005 The World s Great Machine Guns from 1860 to the Present Day London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 84509 161 3 Glanfield John 2001 The Devil s Chariots The Birth and Secret Battles of the first Tanks Stroud Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 4152 5 Grant Neil 2014 The Lewis Gun Oxford UK Osprey ISBN 978 1 78200 791 3 Hogg Ian V 1978 The Complete Illustrated Encyclopedia of the World s Firearm A amp W ISBN 978 0 89479 031 7 Hogg Ian V Batchelor John 1976 The Machine Gun Purnell s History of the World Wars Special London Phoebus Skennerton Ian 1988 British Small Arms of World War 2 Margate QLD Australia Ian Skennerton ISBN 978 0 949749 09 3 Skennerton Ian 2001 303 Lewis Machine Gun Small Arms Identification Series Gold Coast QLD Australia Arms amp Militaria Press ISBN 978 0 949749 42 0 Smith Joseph E 1973 Small Arms of the World 10th Rev ed Harrisburg PA USA Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 88365 155 1 Smith W H B 1979 1943 1943 Basic Manual of Military Small Arms facs ed Harrisburg PA USA Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 1699 4 Textbook of Small Arms 1929 repr ed London UK Dural NSW Rick Landers HMSO for War Office 1999 1929 OCLC 4976525 Townsend Reginald T December 1916 Tanks and The Hose Of Death The World s Work A History of Our Time XXXIII 195 207 Retrieved 4 August 2009 Further reading editMcCleave Easterly William 1998 The Belgian Rattlesnake The Lewis Automatic Machine Gun A Social and Technical Biography of the Gun and Its Inventors Collector Grade ISBN 978 0 88935 236 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lewis Gun Scans of Lewis gun manual of 1917 Lewis light machine gun USA Great Britain at Modern Firearms Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lewis gun amp oldid 1219558586, 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