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Thompson submachine gun

The Thompson submachine gun (also known as the "Tommy Gun", "Chicago Typewriter", "Chicago Piano", “Trench Sweeper” or "Trench Broom") is a blowback-operated, air-cooled, magazine-fed selective-fire submachine gun, invented by United States Army Brigadier general John T. Thompson in 1918. It was originally designed to break the stalemate of trench warfare of World War I, but was not finished until after the war ended.

Thompson Submachine Gun, Caliber .45
Model 1921 Thompson with vertical foregrip and 100 round Type "C" drum magazine
TypeSubmachine gun
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1938–1971 (U.S. military)
Used bySee Users
Wars
Production history
DesignerJohn T. Thompson
Designed1917–1920
Manufacturer
Produced1921–1945
No. builtApproximately 1.75 million of all variants,[13] including:
  • 562,511 M1928A1
  • 285,480 M1
  • 539,143 M1A1
VariantsSee Variants section
Specifications
Mass
  • 10.8 lb (4.9 kg) empty (Thompson M1928A1)[14]
  • 10 lb (4.5 kg) empty (Thompson M1A1)
[15]
Length
  • 33.7 in (860 mm) (M1928A1 with compensator)[14]
  • 31.9 in (810 mm) (M1/M1A1)[15]
Barrel length
  • 10.52 in (267 mm)[14]
  • 12 in (300 mm) (with Cutts compensator)

Cartridge
ActionBlowback, Blish Lock
Rate of fire
  • 700–800rpm (M1928)[14]
  • 600-700rpm (M1A1)[15]
Muzzle velocity935 ft/s (285 m/s)
Effective firing range164 yds (150 m[17])
Feed system20 or 30 round box magazine, 50 or 100 round drum magazine[14] (M1 and M1A1 models do not accept drum magazines)

The Thompson saw early use by the United States Marine Corps during the Banana Wars,[18] the United States Postal Inspection Service, the Irish Republican Army, the Republic of China, and the FBI (following the Kansas City Massacre).

The weapon was also sold to the general public. Because it could be obtained so easily, the Thompson became notorious during the Prohibition era as the signature weapon of various organized crime syndicates in the United States in the 1920s. It was a common sight in the media at the time, and was used by both law enforcement officers and criminals.[19]

The Thompson was widely adopted by the U.S. armed forces during World War II, and was also used extensively by other Allied troops during the war. Its main models were designated as the M1928A1, M1 and M1A1 during this time. More than 1.5 million Thompson submachine guns were produced during World War II.[20]

It is the first weapon to be labelled and marketed as a "submachine gun".[21]

The original selective-fire Thompson variants are no longer produced, although numerous semi-automatic civilian versions are still being produced by the manufacturer Auto-Ordnance. These models retain a similar appearance to the original models, but have various modifications in order to comply with US firearm laws.

History and service

 
Brigadier general John T. Thompson holding an M1921 Thompson

Development

Brigadier general John T. Thompson was the original developer of the Thompson submachine gun, who spent most of his career in the ordnance department of the U.S. Army. He envisioned it as being a fully automatic rifle in order to replace the bolt-action service rifles then in use (such as the American M1903 Springfield).

Brigadier general Thompson came across a patent issued to the American inventor John Bell Blish in 1915, while searching for a way to allow his weapon to operate safely without the complexity of a recoil or gas-operated reloading mechanism. Blish's design (then known as the Blish Lock) was based on the supposed adhesion of inclined metal surfaces under pressure.[22] Thompson gained financial backing from the businessman Thomas F. Ryan and proceeded to found a company, which he named the Auto-Ordnance Company, in 1916, for the purpose of developing his new "auto rifle".

The Thompson was primarily developed in Cleveland, Ohio.[23] Its principal designers were Theodore H. Eickhoff, Oscar V. Payne, and George E. Goll. By late 1917, the limits of the Blish Lock were discovered (which is essentially an extreme manifestation of static friction), and, rather than the firearm working as a locked breech, the weapon was instead designed to function as a friction-delayed blowback action. It was found that the only cartridge currently in service suitable for use with the new lock was the .45 ACP. General Thompson envisioned a "one-man, hand-held machine gun" chambered in .45 ACP to be used as a "trench broom" for the ongoing trench warfare of World War I. Oscar V. Payne designed the new firearm along with its stick and drum magazines. The project was titled "Annihilator I". Most of the design issues had been resolved by 1918; however, the war ended two days before prototypes could be shipped to Europe.[24]

At an Auto-Ordnance board meeting in 1919, in order to discuss the marketing of the "Annihilator", with the war now over the weapon was officially renamed the "Thompson Submachine Gun". While other weapons had been developed shortly prior with similar objectives in mind, the Thompson was the first weapon to be labeled and marketed as a "submachine gun".[21] Thompson intended for the weapon to provide a high volume of automatic, man-portable fire for use in trench warfare—a role for which the Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) had been determined ill-suited.[25] The concept had already been developed by German troops using their own Bergmann MP 18 (the world's first submachine gun) in concert with their Sturmtruppen tactics.[26]

Early use

The first Thompson entered production as the M1921. It was available to civilians, but, because of the weapon's high price, initially saw poor sales. The Thompson (with one Type XX 20 round "stick" magazine) had been priced at $200 in 1921 (roughly equivalent to $3,038 in 2021).

M1921 Thompsons were sold in small numbers to the United States Postal Inspection Service[27] so they could protect the mail from a spate of robberies.[28] It was also sold to the United States Marine Corps, who used their Thompsons in the Banana Wars.[18] Thompsons had also been widely used throughout China, where several Chinese warlords and their military factions running various parts of the fragmented country made purchases of the weapon, and subsequently produced many local copies.

 
US Marine holding an M1928 Thompson during the Banana Wars

The Thompson saw popularity as a point-defense weapon for countering ambushes by Nicaraguan guerrillas (in the Banana Wars) and led to the creation of four-man fire teams which had as much firepower as a nine-man rifle squad. Federal sales were then followed by sales to police departments in the US, as well as to various international armies and constabulary forces; chiefly in Central and South America.[28]

The major initial complaints concerning the Thompson were its cumbersome weight, its inaccuracy at ranges over 50 yards (46 m), and its lack of penetrating power using the .45 ACP cartridge.[29]

The Thompson was first used in combat in June 13 1921, when West Virginia state troopers fired on the mountainside near Lick Creek, where striking miners were firing at passing cars. By the time of the Battle of Blair Mountain, 37 had been acquired by the West Virginia state police and 56 were in the hands of coal companies and local law enforcement. The guns were also shipped to various hardware stores in the region.[30]

Some of the first batches of Thompsons were bought (in America) by agents of the Irish Republic (notably the Irish politician Harry Boland). The first test of the Thompson in Ireland was performed by Irish Republican Army unit commander Tom Barry, of the West Cork Brigade, in the presence of IRA leader Michael Collins.[31] They purchased a total of 653 units, though US customs authorities in New York seized 495 of the units in June 1921. The remainder found their way to the Irish Republican Army by way of Liverpool, England, and were used in the last month of the Irish War of Independence (1919–21).[32] After a truce with the British in July 1921, the Irish Republican Army imported more units, which were used in the subsequent Irish Civil War (1922–23). The Thompson was not found to be very effective in Ireland; having only caused serious casualties in 32 percent of the action in which it was used.[3]

During the failed 1924 coup Estonian communists used Thompsons in an attempt to storm the Tallin barracks; meanwhile the MP18 was used by the defenders. this was possibly the first engagement were submachineguns were used on both sides.[33]

The Thompson achieved early notoriety in the hands of Prohibition and Great Depression-era gangsters and the lawmen who pursued them. It was also depicted in Hollywood films during this era, most notably regarding the St Valentine's Day Massacre. The Thompson guns used in the massacre are still being held by the Berrien County Sheriff's Department.[34] The Thompson has been referred to by one researcher as the "gun that made the twenties roar".[35][36]

In 1926, the Cutts Compensator (a muzzle brake) was offered as an attachment option for the Thompson. Models with the compensator were cataloged as No. 21AC, at the original price of $200. The plain Thompson (without the attachment) was designated No. 21A at a reduced price of $175.[24]

In 1928, Federal Laboratories took over distribution of the weapon from Thompson's Auto Ordnance Corporation.[37] The new cost was listed as $225 per weapon (equivalent to $3,551 in 2021), with $5 per 50-round drum and $3 per 20-round magazine.[37]

 
A British soldier equipped with a Thompson M1928 submachine gun in November 1940. (Note the use of a drum magazine.)

Nationalist China acquired a substantial number of Thompson guns for use against Japanese land forces. They began producing copies of the Thompson in small quantities for use by their armies and militias. In the 1930s, Taiyuan Arsenal (a Chinese weapons manufacturer) produced copies of the Thompson for Yan Xishan, then warlord of Shanxi province.

The FBI had also acquired Thompsons in 1933 following the Kansas City Massacre.[37]

A number of these guns were acquired by a construction company in Brazil,[who?] after construction of a federal road in Sergipe was distrupted by armed Cangaçeiros in December 1937. The bandits violently opposed any attempts to build roads near their territory.[38]

World War II

 
The Prime Minister Winston Churchill inspects a 'Tommy gun' while visiting coastal defense positions near Hartlepool on 31 July 1940

In 1938, the Thompson submachine gun was adopted by the U.S. military and was used during World War II.

There were two military types of Thompson submachine gun:

  • The M1928A1, which had provisions for both box and drum magazines, utilized the Cutts muzzle brake, had cooling fins on the barrel, and employed a delayed blowback action with the charging handle on the top of the receiver.
  • The M1 and M1A1, which had provisions for box magazines only, did not have cooling fins on the barrel, had a simplified rear sight, and employed a straight blowback action with the charging handle on the side of the receiver.

Over 1.5 million military Thompson submachine guns were produced during World War II.[20]

 
Drum and box magazines

Magazine developments

Military users of the M1928A1 units had complaints of the "L" 50-round drum magazine. The British Army criticized "the [magazine's] excessive weight, [and] the rattling sound they made" and shipped thousands back to the U.S. in exchange for 20-round box magazines. The Thompson had to be cocked, bolt retracted, ready to fire, in order to attach the drum magazine. The drum magazine also attached and detached by sliding sideways, which made magazine changes slow and cumbersome. They also created difficulty when clearing a cartridge malfunction ("jam"). Reloading an empty drum with cartridges was a difficult and involved process in which the 50 rounds would be inserted and then the magazine wound up until a minimum of 9 to 11 loud "clicks" were heard before seating the magazine into the weapon.

In contrast, the "XX" twenty-round box magazine was light and compact. It tended not to rattle, and could be inserted with the bolt safely closed. The box magazine was quickly attached and detached, and was removed downward, making clearing jams easier. The box magazine tripped the bolt open lock when empty, facilitating magazine changes. An empty box was easy to reload with loose rounds. However, users complained that it was limited in capacity. In the field, some soldiers would tape two "XX" magazines together, in what would be known as "jungle style", to quicken magazine changes.[39]

Two alternatives to the "L" 50-round drum and "XX" 20-round box magazines were tested December 6, 1941, at Fort Knox, Kentucky. An extended thirty-round box magazine and a forty-round magazine, which were made by welding two 20-round magazines face to face, jungle style, were tested. The testers considered both superior to either the "XX" box or "L" drum. The 30-round box was approved as the new standard in December 1941 to replace the "XX" and "L" magazines.[40] (The concept of welding two box magazines face-to-face was also carried over to the M42 submachine gun.)

M1 development

The staff of Savage Arms looked for ways to simplify the M1928A1, and produced a prototype in February 1942, which was tested at Aberdeen Proving Ground in March 1942. Army Ordnance approved adoption (as the M1) in April 1942. M1s were made by Savage Arms and by Auto-Ordnance. M1s were issued with the 30-round box magazine and would accept the earlier 20-round box, but would not accept the drum magazine.[41]

 
U.S. Marine Davis Hargraves fires on a Japanese position using an M1 Thompson submachine gun as Garbriel Chavarria ducks for cover during an advance on Okinawa in May 1945.

Combat use

 
German Fallschirmjäger troops in Tunisia with a captured M1928A1 Thompson submachine gun — unlike most captured enemy small arms, the Wehrmacht did not assign the Thompson a formal field designation, and did not officially re-issue the weapon to German soldiers

The Thompson was used in World War II in the hands of Allied troops as a weapon for scouts, non-commissioned officers (corporal, sergeant, and higher), and patrol leaders, as well as commissioned officers, tank crewmen, and soldiers performing raids on German positions. In the European theater, the gun was widely utilized in British and Canadian commando units, as well as in the U.S. Army paratrooper and Ranger battalions, where it was issued more frequently than in line infantry units because of its high rate of fire and its stopping power, which made it very effective in the kinds of close combat these special operations troops were expected to undertake. Military Police were fond of it, as were paratroopers, who "borrowed" Thompsons from members of mortar squads for use on patrols behind enemy lines.[42] The gun was prized by those lucky enough to get one and proved itself in the close street fighting that was encountered frequently during the invasion of France. A Swedish variant of the M1928A1, the Kulsprutepistol m/40 (submachine gun, model 40), served in the Swedish Army between 1940 and 1951. Through Lend-Lease, the Soviet Union also received the Thompson, but due to a shortage of appropriate ammunition, its use was not widespread.[43]

In the Malayan Campaign, the Burma Campaign and the Pacific Theater, Lend-Lease-issue Thompsons were used by the British Army, Indian Army, Australian Army infantry and other Commonwealth forces. They used the Thompson extensively in jungle patrols and ambushes, where it was prized for its firepower, though it was criticized for its hefty weight and poor reliability. In New Guinea, the Thompson was the only submachine gun available to the Australian Army for most of the vital Kokoda Track campaign in 1942. It became so prized that soldiers routinely picked up Thompson guns dropped by killed or wounded comrades. However, the weight of the ammunition and difficulties in supply eventually led to its replacement in Australian Army units in 1943 by Australian-made submachine guns, the Owen and Austen.[44] Thompsons were also given to the Royal Australian Air Force and Royal Australian Navy.

In Burma and India, British forces largely replaced the Thompson with the Sten gun. New Zealand commando forces in the South Pacific campaign initially used Thompsons but switched them for the more reliable, lighter, and more accurate Owen during the Solomon Islands and Guadalcanal campaigns.[45] The U.S. Marines also used the Thompson as a limited-issue weapon, especially during their later island assaults. The Thompson was soon found to have limited effect in heavy jungle cover, where the low-velocity .45 bullet would not penetrate most small-diameter trees or protective armor vests. (In 1923, the Army had rejected the .45 Remington–Thompson, which had twice the energy of the .45 ACP).[46] In the U.S. Army, many Pacific War jungle patrols were originally equipped with Thompsons in the early phases of the New Guinea and Guadalcanal campaigns, but soon began employing the Browning Automatic Rifle in its place as a point defense weapon.[47]

The Army introduced the U.S. M3 and M3A1 submachine guns in 1943 with plans to produce the latter in numbers sufficient to cancel future orders for the Thompson, while gradually withdrawing it from the first-line service. However, due to unforeseen production delays and requests for modifications, the M3/M3A1 never replaced the Thompson, and purchases continued until February 1944. Though the M3 was considerably cheaper to produce, at the end of World War II, the Thompson, with a total wartime production of over 1.5 million, outnumbered the M3/M3A1 submachine guns in service by nearly three to one.[20]

After World War II

 
Two Israeli policemen, armed with Thompsons meet a Jordanian legionnaire near the Mandelbaum Gate c. 1950

Thompson submachine guns were used by both sides during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.[48] Following the war, Thompsons were issued to members of Israel's elite Unit 101, upon the formation of that unit in 1953.[49]

During the Greek Civil War, the Thompson submachine gun was used by both sides. The Hellenic Armed Forces, gendarmerie and police units were equipped with Thompson submachine guns supplied by the British and later in the war by the United States. The opposing Communist fighters of the Democratic Army of Greece were also using Thompson submachine guns, either captured from government forces or inherited from ELAS. ELAS was the strongest of the resistance forces during the period of Greek Resistance against the Germans and Italians and were supplied with arms from both the British and the United States. After the demobilization of ELAS, an unspecified number of arms were not surrendered to the government but kept hidden, and were later used by the Democratic Army of Greece.[50]

The Thompson also found service with the KNIL and the Netherlands Marine Corps during their attempt to retake their former colony of Indonesia.[51] During by Indonesian infiltrators during the 1965 Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation.[52]

By the time of the Korean War in 1950, the Thompson had seen much use by the U.S. and South Korean military, even though the Thompson had been replaced as standard-issue by the M3/M3A1. With huge numbers of guns available in army ordnance arsenals, the Thompson remained classed as Limited Standard or Substitute Standard long after the standardization of the M3/M3A1. Many Thompsons were distributed to the US-backed Nationalist Chinese armed forces as military aid before the fall of Chiang Kai-shek's government to Mao Zedong's communist forces at the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949 (Thompsons had already been widely used throughout China since the 1920s, at a time when several Chinese warlords and their military factions running various parts of the fragmented country made purchases of the weapon and then subsequently produced many local copies). During the Korean War, US troops were surprised to encounter communist Chinese troops armed with Thompsons (amongst other captured US-made Nationalist Chinese and American firearms), especially during unexpected night-time assaults which became a prominent Chinese combat tactic in the conflict. The gun's ability to deliver large quantities of short-range automatic assault fire proved very useful in both defense and assault during the early part of the war when it was constantly mobile and shifting back and forth. Many Chinese Thompsons were captured and placed into service with American soldiers and marines for the remaining period of the war.

The Yugoslav Army received 34,000 M1A1 Thompsons during the 1950s as part of a US Military Aid to Yugoslavia Agreement. These guns were used during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s.[11]

During the Cuban Revolution, the Thompson submachine gun was used by both Batista's army and Fidel Castro's guerrillas. Both the latter and the Brigade 2506 also used some during the bay of Pigs Invasion.[53]

During the Vietnam War, some South Vietnamese army units and defense militia were armed with Thompson submachine guns, and a few of these weapons were used by reconnaissance units, advisors, and other American troops. It was partially replaced by the MAC-10, albeit during Vietnam, the fully automatic fire provided by the M16 made the Thompson less effective than it previously had been. Still, not only did some U.S. soldiers have use of them in Vietnam, they encountered them as well. The Viet Cong liked the weapon and used both captured models as well as manufacturing their own copies in small jungle workshops.[54]

The Australian government destroyed most of their Thompson machine carbines in the 1960s. They shipped their remaining stocks to arm the forces of Lon Nol's Khmer Republic in 1975. They were then captured and used by the Khmer Rouge.

In the conflict in Northern Ireland, known as the Troubles (1969–1998), the Thompson was again used by the Irish Republican paramilitaries. According to historian Peter Hart, "The Thompson remained a key part of both the Official IRA and Provisional IRA arsenals until well into the 1970s when it was superseded by the Armalite and the AK-47."[10]

The Thompson was also used by U.S. and overseas law enforcement and police forces, most prominently by the FBI. The FBI used Thompsons until they were declared obsolete and ordered destroyed in the early 1970s.[55]

Collector interest

Because of their quality and craftsmanship, as well as their gangster-era and WWII connections, Thompsons are sought as collector's items. There were fewer than 40 pre-production prototypes. The Colt Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing Company in Hartford, Connecticut was contracted by the Auto-Ordnance Corporation to manufacture the initial mass production of 15,000 Thompson Submachine Guns in 1920. An original Colt Model 1921 A or AC, Model 1927 A or AC, Model 1928 Navy A or AC, properly registered in working condition with original components can easily fetch from US$25,000 to $45,000+ depending on condition and accessories. For WWII, approximately 1,700,000 Thompson Submachine Guns were produced by Auto-Ordnance and Savage Arms, with 1,387,134 being the simplified World War II M1 and M1A1 variants (without the Blish lock and oiling system[56]).

A Model 1921A believed to have been owned by Bonnie and Clyde, but without historical documentation to substantiate this provenance, sold at auction on January 21, 2012, in Kansas City for $130,000.[57]

Features

Operating characteristics

 
Thompson M1928A1, field stripped

Early versions of the Thompson, the Model 1919, had a fairly high cyclic rate of fire, as high as 1,200 rounds per minute (rpm), with most Model 1921s at 800 rpm. This rate of fire, combined with a rather heavy trigger pull and a stock with an excessive drop, increases the tendency for the barrel to climb off target in automatic fire.[58][59] In 1927, the U.S. Navy ordered 500 Thompsons but requested a lower rate of fire. Thompson requested Payne to develop a method of reducing the cyclic rate of fire. Payne then replaced the actuator with one that was heavier, and replaced the recoil spring with one that was stiffer; the changes reduced the rate of fire from 800 to the 600 rpm of the U.S. Navy Model 1928. Later M1 and M1A1 Thompsons averaged also 600 rpm.[58] Compared to more modern submachine guns, the Thompson is quite heavy, weighing roughly the same as the contemporary M1 Garand semi-automatic rifle, and requires a lot of cleaning. This was one of the major complaints about the weapon by U.S. Army personnel to whom it was issued.[29]

 
Thompson 1921, field stripped

Although the drum magazine provided significant firepower, in military service it was found to be overly heavy and bulky, especially when slung on the shoulder while marching.[59] The M1928A1 Thompson drum magazine was rather fragile, and cartridges tended to rattle inside it, producing unwanted noise.[60] For these reasons, the 20-round and later 30-round box magazines soon proved most popular with military users of the M1928A1, and drum compatibility was not included in the design of the wartime M1 and M1A1 models. The Thompson was one of the earliest submachine guns to incorporate a double-column, staggered-feed box magazine design, which undoubtedly contributed to the gun's reputation for reliability. In addition, the gun performed better than most after exposure to rain, dirt, and mud.[29]

The selective-fire (semi or fully automatic) Thompson fires from the "open bolt" position, in which the bolt is held fully to rearward by the sear when cocked. When the trigger is depressed, the bolt is released, traveling forward to chamber and simultaneously fire the first and subsequent rounds until either the trigger is released or the ammunition is exhausted. This eliminates the risk of "cook-off", which can sometimes occur in closed-bolt automatic weapons.

Disassembly

The 1928 variant can be disassembled easily by first detaching the stock, then sliding off the lower receiver and then simply removing the internal parts, cleaning them, and then putting it back together. When opened up, the Thompson features a small number of parts that need to be removed including the spring, bolt, Blish Lock, and actuator bolt.

Variants

Prototypes

Persuader and Annihilator

There were two main experimental models of the Thompson. The Persuader was a belt-fed version developed in 1917/18. It was partially built, but never completely finished. The Annihilator, serial no. Ver 10 prototypes were similar in appearance to the later models, but without the rear sight and butt stock mounts. The Annihilator prototypes first were fed from a 20-round box magazine, but later, the 50- and 100-round drum magazine models were developed.

Model 1919

Starting with the Serial no. 11, the Model 1919 takes the final appearance of the later Thompsons with the rear sights and butt stock. The Model 1919 was limited to about 40 units; the first built did not use the drums, as it was too difficult to fire. Many variations have been noted within this model. The weapons had very high cyclic rates up to 1,500 rpm.[19] This was the weapon Brigadier General Thompson demonstrated at Camp Perry in 1920. A number of Model 1919s were made without butt stocks, rear and front sights, but the final version closely resembled the later Model 1921. This model was designed to "sweep" trenches with bullets. The New York City Police Department was the largest purchaser of the M1919. Some experimental calibers aside from the standard .45 ACP (11.4x23mm) were the .22LR, .32 ACP, .38 ACP, and 9mm.[28]

.351 WSL variant

Only one prototype was made in .351 WSL using a standard 20" barrel which had a ROF of 1000rpm.

Thompson .30 Carbine

The layout and ergonomics of the Thompson submachine gun were also considered for the role of a Light Rifle before the adoption of the M1 Carbine. An example known as the "Calibre .30 Short Rifle" was based on the M1921/27 variants.[61] However, it was turned down without testing due to logistical problems.[62]

.30-06 variant

A .30–06 variant was intended as a rival to the M1918 BAR. It had an extended receiver with a recoil buffer and was fed from 20-round magazines.[63]

Production

Model 1921

 
Thompson Model 1921.

The Model 1921 (M1921) was the first major production model. Fifteen thousand were produced by Colt for Auto-Ordnance. In its original design, it was finished more like a sporting weapon, with an adjustable rear sight, a blued, finned barrel and vertical foregrip (or pistol grip) and the Blish lock. The M1921 was quite expensive to manufacture, with the original retail price around $200, because of its high-quality wood furniture and finely machined parts. The M1921 was famous throughout its career with police and criminals and in motion pictures. This model gained fame from its use by criminals during Prohibition, and was nicknamed "tommy gun" by the media.[64]

Model 1923

The Model 1923 was a heavy submachine gun introduced to potentially expand the Auto-Ordnance product line and was demonstrated for the U.S. Army. It fired the more powerful .45 Remington–Thompson cartridge which fired a heavier 250 gr (0.57 oz; 16 g) bullet at muzzle velocities of about 1,450 ft/s (440 m/s) and energy about 1,170 ft⋅lb (1,590 J), with greater range than the .45 ACP. It introduced a horizontal forearm, improved inline stock for accuracy, 14 in (36 cm) barrel, bipod, and bayonet lug. The M1923 was intended to rival the M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR), with which the Army was already satisfied. The Army did not give the Model 1923 much consideration, so it was not adopted. In addition to the .45 Remington–Thompson, the M1923 Thompsons were to be made available to prospective buyers in several calibers, including .45 ACP, 9mm Parabellum, 9mm Mauser, and .351 Winchester Self-loading.[65]

Model 1921AC (1926)

While not a new model in the usual sense of incorporating major changes, in 1926 the Cutts Compensator (a muzzle brake) was offered as an option for the M1921; Thompsons with the compensator were cataloged as No. 21AC at the original price of $200.00, with the plain M1921 designated No. 21A at a reduced price of $175.00.[24] The Model 1921 was thereafter referred to as Model 1921A or Model 1921AC, though some collectors still refer to it as the Model 1921.

Model 1928

The Model 1928 was the first type widely used by military forces, with the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps as major buyers through the 1930s. The original Model 1928s were Model 1921s with weight added to the actuator, which slowed down the cyclic rate of fire, a United States Navy requirement. On these guns, the model number "1921" on the receiver was updated by stamping an "8" over the last "1". The Navy Model 1928 has several names among collectors: the "Colt Overstamp", "1921 Overstamp", "28 Navy", or just "28N".

The 1928 Thompson would be the last small arm adopted by the U.S. Army that used a year designation in the official nomenclature. With the start of World War II, major contracts from several countries saved the manufacturer from bankruptcy. A notable variant of the Model 1928 with an aluminum receiver and tenite grip, buttstock, and forend, was made by Savage.[66]

M1928A1

 
M1928A1 at Fort Knox, Kentucky, June 1942

The M1928A1 variant entered mass production before the attack on Pearl Harbor, as on-hand stocks ran out. Changes included a horizontal forend, in place of the distinctive vertical foregrip ("pistol grip"), and a provision for a military sling. Despite new U.S. contracts for Lend-Lease shipments abroad to China, France, and the United Kingdom, as well as the needs of American armed forces, only two factories supplied M1928A1 Thompsons during the early years of World War II. Though it could use both the 50-round drum and the 20- or 30-round box magazines, active service favored the box magazines as the drums were more prone to jamming, rattled when moving, and were too heavy and bulky on long patrols. 562,511 were made. Wartime production variants had a fixed rear sight without the triangular sight guard wings and a non-ribbed barrel, both like those found on the M1/M1A1.

In addition, the Soviet Union received M1928A1s, included as standard equipment with the M3 light tanks obtained through Lend-Lease. These submachine guns were used to a limited extent by the Red Army.[67]

Some M1928A1 Thompsons were used by the French before and during the Battle of France (1940) under the designation "Pistolet-mitrailleur 11 mm 43 (C.45) M. 28 A1."

An M1928A1 with an unusual inline stock, modified with elevated sights to increase accuracy, also was produced. Some Thompsons were built with a folding stock, similar to M1A1 Carbines used by Allied tank crews, drivers and paratroopers and submarine raiders.[68]

Service variants

Thompson Machine Carbine (TMC)

In 1940, Commonwealth troops in Egypt and North Africa were issued commercial model Lend-Lease Colt- and Savage-manufactured M1928s. Section leaders carried them instead of pistols or rifles. Many of the Colt models had French-language manuals packed with them as they had been abruptly diverted to England after the fall of France. They soon discovered that the weapon was prone to jamming due to sand. To fix this, the armorers removed the Blish Lock and replaced it with a hex bolt to keep the cocking handle and bolt together. The 20-round Type XX magazines had their peep-holes welded shut to keep sand out and the 50-round Type L drums were discontinued. Ammunition was scarce as it was either in small lots of Lend-Lease commercial ammo or obtained from adjacent American troops. It was later replaced by the 9mm Sten gun and Lanchester SMG.

Models used in the Pacific by Australian troops had their sling swivels remounted on the left side to allow it to be fired more easily while prone. A metal sling mount was fitted to the left side of the wooden buttstock. Ammunition was manufactured in Australia or obtained from adjacent American troops. It was later replaced by the Owen Machine Carbine.

M1

 
Fire controls on an M1 Thompson. Front lever is the selector switch, set for full auto.

Responding to a request for further simplification, the M1 was standardized in April 1942 as the United States Submachine Gun, Cal. .45, M1. Rate of fire was reduced to approximately 600–700 rpm.

First issued in 1943, the M1 uses a simple blowback operation, with the charging handle moved to the side. The flip-up adjustable Lyman rear sight was replaced with a fixed L sight. Late M1s had triangular guard wings added to the rear L sight, which were standardized on the M1A1. The slots adjoining the magazine well allowing the use of a drum magazine were removed. A new magazine catch with the provision for retaining drum magazines removed, was produced, but most M1s and later M1A1s retained the original. The less expensive and more-easily manufactured "stick" magazines were used exclusively in the M1, with a new 30-round version joining the familiar 20-round type. The Cutts compensator, barrel cooling fins, and Blish lock were omitted while the buttstock was permanently affixed. Late production M1 stocks were fitted with reinforcing bolts and washers to prevent splitting of the stock where it attached to the receiver. The British had used improvised bolts or wood screws to reinforce M1928 stocks. The M1 reinforcing bolt and washer were carried over to the M1A1 and retrofitted to many of the M1928A1s in U.S. and British service. Late M1s also had simplified fire control switches, also carried over to the M1A1. Certain M1s had issues with high rate of fire climbing up to ~800 RPM. The exact cause remains unknown, but was resolved with the transition to the M1A1.[69]

M1A1

 
Both sides of the Thompson M1A1 shown with 30-round magazine

The M1A1, standardized in October 1942 as the United States Submachine Gun, Cal. .45, M1A1, could be produced in half the time of the M1928A1, and at a much lower cost. The main difference between the M1 and M1A1 was the bolt. The M1 bolt had a floating firing pin and hammer, the bolt of the M1A1 had the firing pin machined to the face of the bolt, eliminating unnecessary parts. The reinforced stock and protective sight wings were standard. The 30-round magazine became more common. In 1939, Thompsons cost the government $209 apiece. By the spring of 1942, cost-reduction design changes had brought this down to $70. In February 1944, the M1A1 reached a low price of $45 each, including accessories and spare parts, although the difference in price between the M1 and M1A1 was only $0.06. By the end of the war, the M1A1 was replaced with the even lower-cost M3 (commonly called the "Grease Gun").

Semi-automatic

Model 1927

The Model 1927 was the open bolt semi-automatic version of the M1921. It was made by modifying an existing Model 1921, including replacing certain parts. The "Thompson Submachine Gun" inscription was machined over to replace it with "Thompson Semi-Automatic Carbine", and the "Model 1921" inscription was also machined over to replace it with "Model 1927." Although the Model 1927 was semi-automatic only, it was easily converted to fully automatic by installing a full-auto Model 1921 fire control group (internal parts). Most Model 1927s owned by police have been converted back to full-auto.[70] The original Model 1927 is classified as a machine gun under the National Firearms Act of 1934 (a) by being "readily convertible" by swapping parts and (b) by a 1982 BATF ruling making all open bolt semi-automatic firearms manufactured after the date of this ruling classified as machine guns.

Model 1927A1

The Model 1927A1 is a semi-automatic replica version of the Thompson, originally produced by Auto-Ordnance of West Hurley, New York for the civilian collector's market from 1974 to 1999. It has been produced since 1999 by Kahr Arms of Worcester, Massachusetts. It is officially known as the "Thompson Semi-Automatic Carbine, Model of 1927A1." The internal design is completely different to operate from the closed bolt and the carbine has a barrel length of 16.5 in (420 mm) (versus open bolt operation and barrel length of 10.5 in (270 mm) for the fully automatic versions). Under federal regulations, these changes make the Model 1927A1 legally a rifle and remove it from the federal registry requirements of the National Firearms Act. These modern versions should not be confused with the original semi-automatic M1927, which was a slightly modified M1921 produced by Colt for Auto-Ordnance.

The Model 1927A1 is the semi-automatic replica of the Thompson Models of 1921 and 1927. The "Thompson Commando" is a semi-automatic replica of the M1928A1. The Auto-Ordnance replica of the Thompson M1 and M1A1 is known as the TM1, and may be found marked "Thompson Semi-Automatic Carbine, Caliber .45M1".

Model 1927A3

The Model 1927A3 is a semi-automatic, .22 caliber version of the Thompson produced by Auto-Ordnance in West Hurley.

Model 1927A5

The Model 1927A5 is a semi-automatic, .45 ACP pistol version of the Thompson originally produced by Auto-Ordnance in West Hurley from the 1970s until the early 1990s or late 1980s. It featured an aluminum receiver to reduce weight. It has since been replaced with the Kahr Arms TA5 Pistol, which features a 10.5" barrel and steel receiver, unlike the 1927A5's 13" barrel and aluminum receiver.

As per the NFA (National Firearms Act of 1934), the "1927A5 .45 ACP Pistol" is simply classified as a "Firearm" (Any type of firearm with an overall length of 26" or greater, that does not have a buttstock) as it neither fits the definition of a Pistol or Rifle under federal law. This categorization also legally allows it to have 1921 or 1928 style foregrip equipped, unlike other "pistol style" Thompson variants, without an AOW (Any Other Weapon) Tax Stamp.

 
Auto-Ordnance 1927A5 DOJ BATFE Firearm Classification Letter

1928A1 LTD

The 1928A1 LTD is a civilian semi-automatic conversion by Luxembourg Defense Technology (LuxDefTec) in Luxembourg. They are made from original 1928A1 guns of various appearance (with or without Cutt's compensator, ribbed or smooth barrels, adjustable or fixed sights), that were imported Lend-Lease guns from Russia.

Export variants

BSA Thompsons

In an attempt to expand interest and sales overseas, Auto-Ordnance entered into a partnership with and licensed the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited (BSA) in England to produce a European model. These were produced in small quantities and have a different appearance than the classic style. The BSA 1926 was manufactured in 9mmP and 7.63mm Mauser and were tested by various governments, including France, in the mid-1920s. It was never adopted by any military force, and only a small number were produced.[71]

RPB Thompsons

Special purpose variant

A special purpose machine pistol variant of the Thompson is manufactured by RPB Industries of Atlanta.[72]

Suppressed variant

A version with a threaded barrel for suppressors, side folding stock, and modified sights.

Civilian ownership

Canada

All variants and modified versions of Thompson submachine guns (even semiautomatic-only versions) are prohibited by name in Canada, as part of Prohibited Weapons Order No. 13 in 1995. Consequently, they cannot be legally imported or owned except under very limited circumstances. For example, to own one the person must be "grandfathered" and have owned one before the bill was passed against it. The submachine gun is not grandfathered like in the U.S., only the owner. The submachine gun can only be sold to other grandfathered individuals; this keeps prices extremely low as the number of permitted licensed individuals is very small and dwindling with time. Eventually, all prohibited guns will be out of circulation.[73]: Part 1.86 [74]

United States

 
Firing the 1921 Thompson

The perceived popularity of submachine guns such as the Thompson with violent gangsters in the 1920s and 1930s was one of the main reasons given for passage of the National Firearms Act by the United States Congress in 1934. One of its provisions was that owners of fully automatic firearms were required to register them with the predecessor agency of the modern Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). The law also placed restrictions on the possession, transfer, and transport of the weapons.

There are several U.S. made automatic and semi-automatic variants, copies, or replicas. The semi-automatic versions are less regulated by federal law.

United Kingdom

The possession of any fully automatic firearm is prohibited in the UK by the Firearms Act 1968; prohibited firearms can be possessed on a section 5 certificate, but these are not issued for sporting purposes. A fully automatic firearm that has been converted to semi-automatic fire, such as the Model 1927, is prohibited by the Firearms Act 1988, as is any centre-fire purpose-made semi-automatic weapon, such as the Model 1927A1. It is now effectively impossible for a firearm of this type to be legally possessed by a member of the general public, except in certified deactivated condition or where specifically manufactured as a semi-automatic in caliber .22LR.

Germany

The gun, in a government approved semiautomatic conversion or clone, can legally be owned by hunters and sport shooters. With a design date prior to 1942 it is not considered a "weapon of war." Only the fully automatic version is a prohibited weapon. As a long gun, it can be bought by hunters (even if it cannot be used to actually hunt for legal reasons). There are disciplines in government approved sport shooting rulebooks that allow this type to be used, therefore the gun can be bought by sport shooters, too.

Users

Non-state groups

See also

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Bibliography

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  • Moremon, John (2022). "The Tommy Gun in Jungle Warfare: The Use and Usefulness of the Thompson Submachine Gun for Australian Soldiers on the Kokoda Trail, New Guinea, 1942," Vulcan: The Journal of the History of Military Technology, 9(1), 84-117. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/22134603-09010005
  • Nelson, Thomas B. (1963). The World's Submachine Guns, Volume I. International Small Arms Publishers.
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  • (in Portuguese) Olive, Ronaldo. (1996). Guia Internacional de Submetralhadoras. Editora Magnum Ltda.
  • (in Greek)Sazanidis, Christos (1995). Τα όπλα των Ελλήνων [Arms of the Greeks] (in Greek). Thessaloniki (Greece): Maiandros. ISBN 978-960-90213-0-2.
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External links

  • Auto Ordnance
  • The Official Thompson Collectors Association Page
  • "Thompson Submachine Gun: Principles of Operation 1943" on YouTube

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Tommy Gun redirects here For other uses see Tommy Gun disambiguation and Tommy Gunn Chicago Typewriter redirects here For the Korean TV series see Chicago Typewriter TV series The Thompson submachine gun also known as the Tommy Gun Chicago Typewriter Chicago Piano Trench Sweeper or Trench Broom is a blowback operated air cooled magazine fed selective fire submachine gun invented by United States Army Brigadier general John T Thompson in 1918 It was originally designed to break the stalemate of trench warfare of World War I but was not finished until after the war ended Thompson Submachine Gun Caliber 45Model 1921 Thompson with vertical foregrip and 100 round Type C drum magazineTypeSubmachine gunPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1938 1971 U S military Used bySee UsersWarsBanana Wars 1 Irish War of Independence Battle of Blair Mountain Second Honduran Civil War 2 1924 Estonian coup d etat attempt Irish Civil War 3 Basmachi Conflict Castellammarese War Chaco War World War II 4 Indonesian National Revolution Chinese Civil War 5 First Indochina War 6 Greek Civil War 7 Indo Pakistani War of 1947 1948 Arab Israeli War 8 Malayan Emergency 9 Korean War 4 Algerian War Vietnam War 4 Indonesia Malaysia confrontation The Troubles 10 Turkish invasion of Cyprus Yugoslav Wars 11 Iraq War 12 Production historyDesignerJohn T ThompsonDesigned1917 1920ManufacturerAuto Ordnance Company originally The Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited Colt Savage Arms RPB IndustriesProduced1921 1945No builtApproximately 1 75 million of all variants 13 including 562 511 M1928A1 285 480 M1 539 143 M1A1VariantsSee Variants sectionSpecificationsMass10 8 lb 4 9 kg empty Thompson M1928A1 14 10 lb 4 5 kg empty Thompson M1A1 15 Length33 7 in 860 mm M1928A1 with compensator 14 31 9 in 810 mm M1 M1A1 15 Barrel length10 52 in 267 mm 14 12 in 300 mm with Cutts compensator Cartridge 45 ACP 11 43 23mm 10mm Auto Limited quantity of FBI conversions 16 ActionBlowback Blish LockRate of fire700 800rpm M1928 14 600 700rpm M1A1 15 Muzzle velocity935 ft s 285 m s Effective firing range164 yds 150 m 17 Feed system20 or 30 round box magazine 50 or 100 round drum magazine 14 M1 and M1A1 models do not accept drum magazines The Thompson saw early use by the United States Marine Corps during the Banana Wars 18 the United States Postal Inspection Service the Irish Republican Army the Republic of China and the FBI following the Kansas City Massacre The weapon was also sold to the general public Because it could be obtained so easily the Thompson became notorious during the Prohibition era as the signature weapon of various organized crime syndicates in the United States in the 1920s It was a common sight in the media at the time and was used by both law enforcement officers and criminals 19 The Thompson was widely adopted by the U S armed forces during World War II and was also used extensively by other Allied troops during the war Its main models were designated as the M1928A1 M1 and M1A1 during this time More than 1 5 million Thompson submachine guns were produced during World War II 20 It is the first weapon to be labelled and marketed as a submachine gun 21 The original selective fire Thompson variants are no longer produced although numerous semi automatic civilian versions are still being produced by the manufacturer Auto Ordnance These models retain a similar appearance to the original models but have various modifications in order to comply with US firearm laws Contents 1 History and service 1 1 Development 1 2 Early use 1 3 World War II 1 3 1 Magazine developments 1 3 2 M1 development 1 3 3 Combat use 1 4 After World War II 2 Collector interest 3 Features 3 1 Operating characteristics 3 2 Disassembly 4 Variants 4 1 Prototypes 4 1 1 Persuader and Annihilator 4 1 2 Model 1919 4 1 3 351 WSL variant 4 1 4 Thompson 30 Carbine 4 1 5 30 06 variant 4 2 Production 4 2 1 Model 1921 4 2 2 Model 1923 4 2 3 Model 1921AC 1926 4 2 4 Model 1928 4 2 5 M1928A1 4 3 Service variants 4 3 1 Thompson Machine Carbine TMC 4 3 2 M1 4 3 3 M1A1 4 4 Semi automatic 4 4 1 Model 1927 4 4 2 Model 1927A1 4 4 3 Model 1927A3 4 4 4 Model 1927A5 4 4 5 1928A1 LTD 4 5 Export variants 4 5 1 BSA Thompsons 4 6 RPB Thompsons 4 6 1 Special purpose variant 4 6 2 Suppressed variant 5 Civilian ownership 5 1 Canada 5 2 United States 5 3 United Kingdom 5 4 Germany 6 Users 6 1 Non state groups 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory and service Edit Brigadier general John T Thompson holding an M1921 Thompson Development Edit Brigadier general John T Thompson was the original developer of the Thompson submachine gun who spent most of his career in the ordnance department of the U S Army He envisioned it as being a fully automatic rifle in order to replace the bolt action service rifles then in use such as the American M1903 Springfield Brigadier general Thompson came across a patent issued to the American inventor John Bell Blish in 1915 while searching for a way to allow his weapon to operate safely without the complexity of a recoil or gas operated reloading mechanism Blish s design then known as the Blish Lock was based on the supposed adhesion of inclined metal surfaces under pressure 22 Thompson gained financial backing from the businessman Thomas F Ryan and proceeded to found a company which he named the Auto Ordnance Company in 1916 for the purpose of developing his new auto rifle The Thompson was primarily developed in Cleveland Ohio 23 Its principal designers were Theodore H Eickhoff Oscar V Payne and George E Goll By late 1917 the limits of the Blish Lock were discovered which is essentially an extreme manifestation of static friction and rather than the firearm working as a locked breech the weapon was instead designed to function as a friction delayed blowback action It was found that the only cartridge currently in service suitable for use with the new lock was the 45 ACP General Thompson envisioned a one man hand held machine gun chambered in 45 ACP to be used as a trench broom for the ongoing trench warfare of World War I Oscar V Payne designed the new firearm along with its stick and drum magazines The project was titled Annihilator I Most of the design issues had been resolved by 1918 however the war ended two days before prototypes could be shipped to Europe 24 At an Auto Ordnance board meeting in 1919 in order to discuss the marketing of the Annihilator with the war now over the weapon was officially renamed the Thompson Submachine Gun While other weapons had been developed shortly prior with similar objectives in mind the Thompson was the first weapon to be labeled and marketed as a submachine gun 21 Thompson intended for the weapon to provide a high volume of automatic man portable fire for use in trench warfare a role for which the Browning Automatic Rifle BAR had been determined ill suited 25 The concept had already been developed by German troops using their own Bergmann MP 18 the world s first submachine gun in concert with their Sturmtruppen tactics 26 Early use Edit The first Thompson entered production as the M1921 It was available to civilians but because of the weapon s high price initially saw poor sales The Thompson with one Type XX 20 round stick magazine had been priced at 200 in 1921 roughly equivalent to 3 038 in 2021 M1921 Thompsons were sold in small numbers to the United States Postal Inspection Service 27 so they could protect the mail from a spate of robberies 28 It was also sold to the United States Marine Corps who used their Thompsons in the Banana Wars 18 Thompsons had also been widely used throughout China where several Chinese warlords and their military factions running various parts of the fragmented country made purchases of the weapon and subsequently produced many local copies US Marine holding an M1928 Thompson during the Banana Wars The Thompson saw popularity as a point defense weapon for countering ambushes by Nicaraguan guerrillas in the Banana Wars and led to the creation of four man fire teams which had as much firepower as a nine man rifle squad Federal sales were then followed by sales to police departments in the US as well as to various international armies and constabulary forces chiefly in Central and South America 28 The major initial complaints concerning the Thompson were its cumbersome weight its inaccuracy at ranges over 50 yards 46 m and its lack of penetrating power using the 45 ACP cartridge 29 The Thompson was first used in combat in June 13 1921 when West Virginia state troopers fired on the mountainside near Lick Creek where striking miners were firing at passing cars By the time of the Battle of Blair Mountain 37 had been acquired by the West Virginia state police and 56 were in the hands of coal companies and local law enforcement The guns were also shipped to various hardware stores in the region 30 Some of the first batches of Thompsons were bought in America by agents of the Irish Republic notably the Irish politician Harry Boland The first test of the Thompson in Ireland was performed by Irish Republican Army unit commander Tom Barry of the West Cork Brigade in the presence of IRA leader Michael Collins 31 They purchased a total of 653 units though US customs authorities in New York seized 495 of the units in June 1921 The remainder found their way to the Irish Republican Army by way of Liverpool England and were used in the last month of the Irish War of Independence 1919 21 32 After a truce with the British in July 1921 the Irish Republican Army imported more units which were used in the subsequent Irish Civil War 1922 23 The Thompson was not found to be very effective in Ireland having only caused serious casualties in 32 percent of the action in which it was used 3 During the failed 1924 coup Estonian communists used Thompsons in an attempt to storm the Tallin barracks meanwhile the MP18 was used by the defenders this was possibly the first engagement were submachineguns were used on both sides 33 The Thompson achieved early notoriety in the hands of Prohibition and Great Depression era gangsters and the lawmen who pursued them It was also depicted in Hollywood films during this era most notably regarding the St Valentine s Day Massacre The Thompson guns used in the massacre are still being held by the Berrien County Sheriff s Department 34 The Thompson has been referred to by one researcher as the gun that made the twenties roar 35 36 In 1926 the Cutts Compensator a muzzle brake was offered as an attachment option for the Thompson Models with the compensator were cataloged as No 21AC at the original price of 200 The plain Thompson without the attachment was designated No 21A at a reduced price of 175 24 In 1928 Federal Laboratories took over distribution of the weapon from Thompson s Auto Ordnance Corporation 37 The new cost was listed as 225 per weapon equivalent to 3 551 in 2021 with 5 per 50 round drum and 3 per 20 round magazine 37 A British soldier equipped with a Thompson M1928 submachine gun in November 1940 Note the use of a drum magazine Nationalist China acquired a substantial number of Thompson guns for use against Japanese land forces They began producing copies of the Thompson in small quantities for use by their armies and militias In the 1930s Taiyuan Arsenal a Chinese weapons manufacturer produced copies of the Thompson for Yan Xishan then warlord of Shanxi province The FBI had also acquired Thompsons in 1933 following the Kansas City Massacre 37 A number of these guns were acquired by a construction company in Brazil who after construction of a federal road in Sergipe was distrupted by armed Cangaceiros in December 1937 The bandits violently opposed any attempts to build roads near their territory 38 World War II Edit The Prime Minister Winston Churchill inspects a Tommy gun while visiting coastal defense positions near Hartlepool on 31 July 1940 In 1938 the Thompson submachine gun was adopted by the U S military and was used during World War II There were two military types of Thompson submachine gun The M1928A1 which had provisions for both box and drum magazines utilized the Cutts muzzle brake had cooling fins on the barrel and employed a delayed blowback action with the charging handle on the top of the receiver The M1 and M1A1 which had provisions for box magazines only did not have cooling fins on the barrel had a simplified rear sight and employed a straight blowback action with the charging handle on the side of the receiver Over 1 5 million military Thompson submachine guns were produced during World War II 20 Drum and box magazines Magazine developments Edit Military users of the M1928A1 units had complaints of the L 50 round drum magazine The British Army criticized the magazine s excessive weight and the rattling sound they made and shipped thousands back to the U S in exchange for 20 round box magazines The Thompson had to be cocked bolt retracted ready to fire in order to attach the drum magazine The drum magazine also attached and detached by sliding sideways which made magazine changes slow and cumbersome They also created difficulty when clearing a cartridge malfunction jam Reloading an empty drum with cartridges was a difficult and involved process in which the 50 rounds would be inserted and then the magazine wound up until a minimum of 9 to 11 loud clicks were heard before seating the magazine into the weapon In contrast the XX twenty round box magazine was light and compact It tended not to rattle and could be inserted with the bolt safely closed The box magazine was quickly attached and detached and was removed downward making clearing jams easier The box magazine tripped the bolt open lock when empty facilitating magazine changes An empty box was easy to reload with loose rounds However users complained that it was limited in capacity In the field some soldiers would tape two XX magazines together in what would be known as jungle style to quicken magazine changes 39 Two alternatives to the L 50 round drum and XX 20 round box magazines were tested December 6 1941 at Fort Knox Kentucky An extended thirty round box magazine and a forty round magazine which were made by welding two 20 round magazines face to face jungle style were tested The testers considered both superior to either the XX box or L drum The 30 round box was approved as the new standard in December 1941 to replace the XX and L magazines 40 The concept of welding two box magazines face to face was also carried over to the M42 submachine gun M1 development Edit The staff of Savage Arms looked for ways to simplify the M1928A1 and produced a prototype in February 1942 which was tested at Aberdeen Proving Ground in March 1942 Army Ordnance approved adoption as the M1 in April 1942 M1s were made by Savage Arms and by Auto Ordnance M1s were issued with the 30 round box magazine and would accept the earlier 20 round box but would not accept the drum magazine 41 U S Marine Davis Hargraves fires on a Japanese position using an M1 Thompson submachine gun as Garbriel Chavarria ducks for cover during an advance on Okinawa in May 1945 Combat use Edit German Fallschirmjager troops in Tunisia with a captured M1928A1 Thompson submachine gun unlike most captured enemy small arms the Wehrmacht did not assign the Thompson a formal field designation and did not officially re issue the weapon to German soldiers The Thompson was used in World War II in the hands of Allied troops as a weapon for scouts non commissioned officers corporal sergeant and higher and patrol leaders as well as commissioned officers tank crewmen and soldiers performing raids on German positions In the European theater the gun was widely utilized in British and Canadian commando units as well as in the U S Army paratrooper and Ranger battalions where it was issued more frequently than in line infantry units because of its high rate of fire and its stopping power which made it very effective in the kinds of close combat these special operations troops were expected to undertake Military Police were fond of it as were paratroopers who borrowed Thompsons from members of mortar squads for use on patrols behind enemy lines 42 The gun was prized by those lucky enough to get one and proved itself in the close street fighting that was encountered frequently during the invasion of France A Swedish variant of the M1928A1 the Kulsprutepistol m 40 submachine gun model 40 served in the Swedish Army between 1940 and 1951 Through Lend Lease the Soviet Union also received the Thompson but due to a shortage of appropriate ammunition its use was not widespread 43 In the Malayan Campaign the Burma Campaign and the Pacific Theater Lend Lease issue Thompsons were used by the British Army Indian Army Australian Army infantry and other Commonwealth forces They used the Thompson extensively in jungle patrols and ambushes where it was prized for its firepower though it was criticized for its hefty weight and poor reliability In New Guinea the Thompson was the only submachine gun available to the Australian Army for most of the vital Kokoda Track campaign in 1942 It became so prized that soldiers routinely picked up Thompson guns dropped by killed or wounded comrades However the weight of the ammunition and difficulties in supply eventually led to its replacement in Australian Army units in 1943 by Australian made submachine guns the Owen and Austen 44 Thompsons were also given to the Royal Australian Air Force and Royal Australian Navy In Burma and India British forces largely replaced the Thompson with the Sten gun New Zealand commando forces in the South Pacific campaign initially used Thompsons but switched them for the more reliable lighter and more accurate Owen during the Solomon Islands and Guadalcanal campaigns 45 The U S Marines also used the Thompson as a limited issue weapon especially during their later island assaults The Thompson was soon found to have limited effect in heavy jungle cover where the low velocity 45 bullet would not penetrate most small diameter trees or protective armor vests In 1923 the Army had rejected the 45 Remington Thompson which had twice the energy of the 45 ACP 46 In the U S Army many Pacific War jungle patrols were originally equipped with Thompsons in the early phases of the New Guinea and Guadalcanal campaigns but soon began employing the Browning Automatic Rifle in its place as a point defense weapon 47 The Army introduced the U S M3 and M3A1 submachine guns in 1943 with plans to produce the latter in numbers sufficient to cancel future orders for the Thompson while gradually withdrawing it from the first line service However due to unforeseen production delays and requests for modifications the M3 M3A1 never replaced the Thompson and purchases continued until February 1944 Though the M3 was considerably cheaper to produce at the end of World War II the Thompson with a total wartime production of over 1 5 million outnumbered the M3 M3A1 submachine guns in service by nearly three to one 20 After World War II Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Thompson submachine gun news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Two Israeli policemen armed with Thompsons meet a Jordanian legionnaire near the Mandelbaum Gate c 1950 Thompson submachine guns were used by both sides during the 1948 Arab Israeli war 48 Following the war Thompsons were issued to members of Israel s elite Unit 101 upon the formation of that unit in 1953 49 During the Greek Civil War the Thompson submachine gun was used by both sides The Hellenic Armed Forces gendarmerie and police units were equipped with Thompson submachine guns supplied by the British and later in the war by the United States The opposing Communist fighters of the Democratic Army of Greece were also using Thompson submachine guns either captured from government forces or inherited from ELAS ELAS was the strongest of the resistance forces during the period of Greek Resistance against the Germans and Italians and were supplied with arms from both the British and the United States After the demobilization of ELAS an unspecified number of arms were not surrendered to the government but kept hidden and were later used by the Democratic Army of Greece 50 The Thompson also found service with the KNIL and the Netherlands Marine Corps during their attempt to retake their former colony of Indonesia 51 During by Indonesian infiltrators during the 1965 Indonesia Malaysia confrontation 52 By the time of the Korean War in 1950 the Thompson had seen much use by the U S and South Korean military even though the Thompson had been replaced as standard issue by the M3 M3A1 With huge numbers of guns available in army ordnance arsenals the Thompson remained classed as Limited Standard or Substitute Standard long after the standardization of the M3 M3A1 Many Thompsons were distributed to the US backed Nationalist Chinese armed forces as military aid before the fall of Chiang Kai shek s government to Mao Zedong s communist forces at the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949 Thompsons had already been widely used throughout China since the 1920s at a time when several Chinese warlords and their military factions running various parts of the fragmented country made purchases of the weapon and then subsequently produced many local copies During the Korean War US troops were surprised to encounter communist Chinese troops armed with Thompsons amongst other captured US made Nationalist Chinese and American firearms especially during unexpected night time assaults which became a prominent Chinese combat tactic in the conflict The gun s ability to deliver large quantities of short range automatic assault fire proved very useful in both defense and assault during the early part of the war when it was constantly mobile and shifting back and forth Many Chinese Thompsons were captured and placed into service with American soldiers and marines for the remaining period of the war The Yugoslav Army received 34 000 M1A1 Thompsons during the 1950s as part of a US Military Aid to Yugoslavia Agreement These guns were used during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s 11 During the Cuban Revolution the Thompson submachine gun was used by both Batista s army and Fidel Castro s guerrillas Both the latter and the Brigade 2506 also used some during the bay of Pigs Invasion 53 During the Vietnam War some South Vietnamese army units and defense militia were armed with Thompson submachine guns and a few of these weapons were used by reconnaissance units advisors and other American troops It was partially replaced by the MAC 10 albeit during Vietnam the fully automatic fire provided by the M16 made the Thompson less effective than it previously had been Still not only did some U S soldiers have use of them in Vietnam they encountered them as well The Viet Cong liked the weapon and used both captured models as well as manufacturing their own copies in small jungle workshops 54 The Australian government destroyed most of their Thompson machine carbines in the 1960s They shipped their remaining stocks to arm the forces of Lon Nol s Khmer Republic in 1975 They were then captured and used by the Khmer Rouge In the conflict in Northern Ireland known as the Troubles 1969 1998 the Thompson was again used by the Irish Republican paramilitaries According to historian Peter Hart The Thompson remained a key part of both the Official IRA and Provisional IRA arsenals until well into the 1970s when it was superseded by the Armalite and the AK 47 10 The Thompson was also used by U S and overseas law enforcement and police forces most prominently by the FBI The FBI used Thompsons until they were declared obsolete and ordered destroyed in the early 1970s 55 Collector interest EditBecause of their quality and craftsmanship as well as their gangster era and WWII connections Thompsons are sought as collector s items There were fewer than 40 pre production prototypes The Colt Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing Company in Hartford Connecticut was contracted by the Auto Ordnance Corporation to manufacture the initial mass production of 15 000 Thompson Submachine Guns in 1920 An original Colt Model 1921 A or AC Model 1927 A or AC Model 1928 Navy A or AC properly registered in working condition with original components can easily fetch from US 25 000 to 45 000 depending on condition and accessories For WWII approximately 1 700 000 Thompson Submachine Guns were produced by Auto Ordnance and Savage Arms with 1 387 134 being the simplified World War II M1 and M1A1 variants without the Blish lock and oiling system 56 A Model 1921A believed to have been owned by Bonnie and Clyde but without historical documentation to substantiate this provenance sold at auction on January 21 2012 in Kansas City for 130 000 57 Features EditOperating characteristics Edit Thompson M1928A1 field stripped Early versions of the Thompson the Model 1919 had a fairly high cyclic rate of fire as high as 1 200 rounds per minute rpm with most Model 1921s at 800 rpm This rate of fire combined with a rather heavy trigger pull and a stock with an excessive drop increases the tendency for the barrel to climb off target in automatic fire 58 59 In 1927 the U S Navy ordered 500 Thompsons but requested a lower rate of fire Thompson requested Payne to develop a method of reducing the cyclic rate of fire Payne then replaced the actuator with one that was heavier and replaced the recoil spring with one that was stiffer the changes reduced the rate of fire from 800 to the 600 rpm of the U S Navy Model 1928 Later M1 and M1A1 Thompsons averaged also 600 rpm 58 Compared to more modern submachine guns the Thompson is quite heavy weighing roughly the same as the contemporary M1 Garand semi automatic rifle and requires a lot of cleaning This was one of the major complaints about the weapon by U S Army personnel to whom it was issued 29 Thompson 1921 field stripped Although the drum magazine provided significant firepower in military service it was found to be overly heavy and bulky especially when slung on the shoulder while marching 59 The M1928A1 Thompson drum magazine was rather fragile and cartridges tended to rattle inside it producing unwanted noise 60 For these reasons the 20 round and later 30 round box magazines soon proved most popular with military users of the M1928A1 and drum compatibility was not included in the design of the wartime M1 and M1A1 models The Thompson was one of the earliest submachine guns to incorporate a double column staggered feed box magazine design which undoubtedly contributed to the gun s reputation for reliability In addition the gun performed better than most after exposure to rain dirt and mud 29 The selective fire semi or fully automatic Thompson fires from the open bolt position in which the bolt is held fully to rearward by the sear when cocked When the trigger is depressed the bolt is released traveling forward to chamber and simultaneously fire the first and subsequent rounds until either the trigger is released or the ammunition is exhausted This eliminates the risk of cook off which can sometimes occur in closed bolt automatic weapons Disassembly Edit The 1928 variant can be disassembled easily by first detaching the stock then sliding off the lower receiver and then simply removing the internal parts cleaning them and then putting it back together When opened up the Thompson features a small number of parts that need to be removed including the spring bolt Blish Lock and actuator bolt Variants EditPrototypes Edit Persuader and Annihilator Edit There were two main experimental models of the Thompson The Persuader was a belt fed version developed in 1917 18 It was partially built but never completely finished The Annihilator serial no Ver 10 prototypes were similar in appearance to the later models but without the rear sight and butt stock mounts The Annihilator prototypes first were fed from a 20 round box magazine but later the 50 and 100 round drum magazine models were developed Model 1919 Edit Starting with the Serial no 11 the Model 1919 takes the final appearance of the later Thompsons with the rear sights and butt stock The Model 1919 was limited to about 40 units the first built did not use the drums as it was too difficult to fire Many variations have been noted within this model The weapons had very high cyclic rates up to 1 500 rpm 19 This was the weapon Brigadier General Thompson demonstrated at Camp Perry in 1920 A number of Model 1919s were made without butt stocks rear and front sights but the final version closely resembled the later Model 1921 This model was designed to sweep trenches with bullets The New York City Police Department was the largest purchaser of the M1919 Some experimental calibers aside from the standard 45 ACP 11 4x23mm were the 22LR 32 ACP 38 ACP and 9mm 28 351 WSL variant Edit Only one prototype was made in 351 WSL using a standard 20 barrel which had a ROF of 1000rpm Thompson 30 Carbine Edit The layout and ergonomics of the Thompson submachine gun were also considered for the role of a Light Rifle before the adoption of the M1 Carbine An example known as the Calibre 30 Short Rifle was based on the M1921 27 variants 61 However it was turned down without testing due to logistical problems 62 30 06 variant Edit A 30 06 variant was intended as a rival to the M1918 BAR It had an extended receiver with a recoil buffer and was fed from 20 round magazines 63 Production Edit Model 1921 Edit Thompson Model 1921 The Model 1921 M1921 was the first major production model Fifteen thousand were produced by Colt for Auto Ordnance In its original design it was finished more like a sporting weapon with an adjustable rear sight a blued finned barrel and vertical foregrip or pistol grip and the Blish lock The M1921 was quite expensive to manufacture with the original retail price around 200 because of its high quality wood furniture and finely machined parts The M1921 was famous throughout its career with police and criminals and in motion pictures This model gained fame from its use by criminals during Prohibition and was nicknamed tommy gun by the media 64 Model 1923 Edit The Model 1923 was a heavy submachine gun introduced to potentially expand the Auto Ordnance product line and was demonstrated for the U S Army It fired the more powerful 45 Remington Thompson cartridge which fired a heavier 250 gr 0 57 oz 16 g bullet at muzzle velocities of about 1 450 ft s 440 m s and energy about 1 170 ft lb 1 590 J with greater range than the 45 ACP It introduced a horizontal forearm improved inline stock for accuracy 14 in 36 cm barrel bipod and bayonet lug The M1923 was intended to rival the M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle BAR with which the Army was already satisfied The Army did not give the Model 1923 much consideration so it was not adopted In addition to the 45 Remington Thompson the M1923 Thompsons were to be made available to prospective buyers in several calibers including 45 ACP 9mm Parabellum 9mm Mauser and 351 Winchester Self loading 65 Model 1921AC 1926 Edit While not a new model in the usual sense of incorporating major changes in 1926 the Cutts Compensator a muzzle brake was offered as an option for the M1921 Thompsons with the compensator were cataloged as No 21AC at the original price of 200 00 with the plain M1921 designated No 21A at a reduced price of 175 00 24 The Model 1921 was thereafter referred to as Model 1921A or Model 1921AC though some collectors still refer to it as the Model 1921 Model 1928 Edit The Model 1928 was the first type widely used by military forces with the U S Navy and U S Marine Corps as major buyers through the 1930s The original Model 1928s were Model 1921s with weight added to the actuator which slowed down the cyclic rate of fire a United States Navy requirement On these guns the model number 1921 on the receiver was updated by stamping an 8 over the last 1 The Navy Model 1928 has several names among collectors the Colt Overstamp 1921 Overstamp 28 Navy or just 28N The 1928 Thompson would be the last small arm adopted by the U S Army that used a year designation in the official nomenclature With the start of World War II major contracts from several countries saved the manufacturer from bankruptcy A notable variant of the Model 1928 with an aluminum receiver and tenite grip buttstock and forend was made by Savage 66 M1928A1 Edit M1928A1 at Fort Knox Kentucky June 1942 The M1928A1 variant entered mass production before the attack on Pearl Harbor as on hand stocks ran out Changes included a horizontal forend in place of the distinctive vertical foregrip pistol grip and a provision for a military sling Despite new U S contracts for Lend Lease shipments abroad to China France and the United Kingdom as well as the needs of American armed forces only two factories supplied M1928A1 Thompsons during the early years of World War II Though it could use both the 50 round drum and the 20 or 30 round box magazines active service favored the box magazines as the drums were more prone to jamming rattled when moving and were too heavy and bulky on long patrols 562 511 were made Wartime production variants had a fixed rear sight without the triangular sight guard wings and a non ribbed barrel both like those found on the M1 M1A1 In addition the Soviet Union received M1928A1s included as standard equipment with the M3 light tanks obtained through Lend Lease These submachine guns were used to a limited extent by the Red Army 67 Some M1928A1 Thompsons were used by the French before and during the Battle of France 1940 under the designation Pistolet mitrailleur 11 mm 43 C 45 M 28 A1 An M1928A1 with an unusual inline stock modified with elevated sights to increase accuracy also was produced Some Thompsons were built with a folding stock similar to M1A1 Carbines used by Allied tank crews drivers and paratroopers and submarine raiders 68 Service variants Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Thompson Machine Carbine TMC Edit In 1940 Commonwealth troops in Egypt and North Africa were issued commercial model Lend Lease Colt and Savage manufactured M1928s Section leaders carried them instead of pistols or rifles Many of the Colt models had French language manuals packed with them as they had been abruptly diverted to England after the fall of France They soon discovered that the weapon was prone to jamming due to sand To fix this the armorers removed the Blish Lock and replaced it with a hex bolt to keep the cocking handle and bolt together The 20 round Type XX magazines had their peep holes welded shut to keep sand out and the 50 round Type L drums were discontinued Ammunition was scarce as it was either in small lots of Lend Lease commercial ammo or obtained from adjacent American troops It was later replaced by the 9mm Sten gun and Lanchester SMG Models used in the Pacific by Australian troops had their sling swivels remounted on the left side to allow it to be fired more easily while prone A metal sling mount was fitted to the left side of the wooden buttstock Ammunition was manufactured in Australia or obtained from adjacent American troops It was later replaced by the Owen Machine Carbine M1 Edit Fire controls on an M1 Thompson Front lever is the selector switch set for full auto Responding to a request for further simplification the M1 was standardized in April 1942 as the United States Submachine Gun Cal 45 M1 Rate of fire was reduced to approximately 600 700 rpm First issued in 1943 the M1 uses a simple blowback operation with the charging handle moved to the side The flip up adjustable Lyman rear sight was replaced with a fixed L sight Late M1s had triangular guard wings added to the rear L sight which were standardized on the M1A1 The slots adjoining the magazine well allowing the use of a drum magazine were removed A new magazine catch with the provision for retaining drum magazines removed was produced but most M1s and later M1A1s retained the original The less expensive and more easily manufactured stick magazines were used exclusively in the M1 with a new 30 round version joining the familiar 20 round type The Cutts compensator barrel cooling fins and Blish lock were omitted while the buttstock was permanently affixed Late production M1 stocks were fitted with reinforcing bolts and washers to prevent splitting of the stock where it attached to the receiver The British had used improvised bolts or wood screws to reinforce M1928 stocks The M1 reinforcing bolt and washer were carried over to the M1A1 and retrofitted to many of the M1928A1s in U S and British service Late M1s also had simplified fire control switches also carried over to the M1A1 Certain M1s had issues with high rate of fire climbing up to 800 RPM The exact cause remains unknown but was resolved with the transition to the M1A1 69 M1A1 Edit Both sides of the Thompson M1A1 shown with 30 round magazine The M1A1 standardized in October 1942 as the United States Submachine Gun Cal 45 M1A1 could be produced in half the time of the M1928A1 and at a much lower cost The main difference between the M1 and M1A1 was the bolt The M1 bolt had a floating firing pin and hammer the bolt of the M1A1 had the firing pin machined to the face of the bolt eliminating unnecessary parts The reinforced stock and protective sight wings were standard The 30 round magazine became more common In 1939 Thompsons cost the government 209 apiece By the spring of 1942 cost reduction design changes had brought this down to 70 In February 1944 the M1A1 reached a low price of 45 each including accessories and spare parts although the difference in price between the M1 and M1A1 was only 0 06 By the end of the war the M1A1 was replaced with the even lower cost M3 commonly called the Grease Gun Semi automatic Edit Model 1927 Edit The Model 1927 was the open bolt semi automatic version of the M1921 It was made by modifying an existing Model 1921 including replacing certain parts The Thompson Submachine Gun inscription was machined over to replace it with Thompson Semi Automatic Carbine and the Model 1921 inscription was also machined over to replace it with Model 1927 Although the Model 1927 was semi automatic only it was easily converted to fully automatic by installing a full auto Model 1921 fire control group internal parts Most Model 1927s owned by police have been converted back to full auto 70 The original Model 1927 is classified as a machine gun under the National Firearms Act of 1934 a by being readily convertible by swapping parts and b by a 1982 BATF ruling making all open bolt semi automatic firearms manufactured after the date of this ruling classified as machine guns Model 1927A1 Edit The Model 1927A1 is a semi automatic replica version of the Thompson originally produced by Auto Ordnance of West Hurley New York for the civilian collector s market from 1974 to 1999 It has been produced since 1999 by Kahr Arms of Worcester Massachusetts It is officially known as the Thompson Semi Automatic Carbine Model of 1927A1 The internal design is completely different to operate from the closed bolt and the carbine has a barrel length of 16 5 in 420 mm versus open bolt operation and barrel length of 10 5 in 270 mm for the fully automatic versions Under federal regulations these changes make the Model 1927A1 legally a rifle and remove it from the federal registry requirements of the National Firearms Act These modern versions should not be confused with the original semi automatic M1927 which was a slightly modified M1921 produced by Colt for Auto Ordnance The Model 1927A1 is the semi automatic replica of the Thompson Models of 1921 and 1927 The Thompson Commando is a semi automatic replica of the M1928A1 The Auto Ordnance replica of the Thompson M1 and M1A1 is known as the TM1 and may be found marked Thompson Semi Automatic Carbine Caliber 45M1 Model 1927A3 Edit The Model 1927A3 is a semi automatic 22 caliber version of the Thompson produced by Auto Ordnance in West Hurley Model 1927A5 Edit The Model 1927A5 is a semi automatic 45 ACP pistol version of the Thompson originally produced by Auto Ordnance in West Hurley from the 1970s until the early 1990s or late 1980s It featured an aluminum receiver to reduce weight It has since been replaced with the Kahr Arms TA5 Pistol which features a 10 5 barrel and steel receiver unlike the 1927A5 s 13 barrel and aluminum receiver As per the NFA National Firearms Act of 1934 the 1927A5 45 ACP Pistol is simply classified as a Firearm Any type of firearm with an overall length of 26 or greater that does not have a buttstock as it neither fits the definition of a Pistol or Rifle under federal law This categorization also legally allows it to have 1921 or 1928 style foregrip equipped unlike other pistol style Thompson variants without an AOW Any Other Weapon Tax Stamp Auto Ordnance 1927A5 DOJ BATFE Firearm Classification Letter 1928A1 LTD Edit The 1928A1 LTD is a civilian semi automatic conversion by Luxembourg Defense Technology LuxDefTec in Luxembourg They are made from original 1928A1 guns of various appearance with or without Cutt s compensator ribbed or smooth barrels adjustable or fixed sights that were imported Lend Lease guns from Russia Export variants Edit BSA Thompsons Edit In an attempt to expand interest and sales overseas Auto Ordnance entered into a partnership with and licensed the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited BSA in England to produce a European model These were produced in small quantities and have a different appearance than the classic style The BSA 1926 was manufactured in 9mmP and 7 63mm Mauser and were tested by various governments including France in the mid 1920s It was never adopted by any military force and only a small number were produced 71 RPB Thompsons Edit Special purpose variant Edit A special purpose machine pistol variant of the Thompson is manufactured by RPB Industries of Atlanta 72 Suppressed variant Edit A version with a threaded barrel for suppressors side folding stock and modified sights Civilian ownership EditCanada Edit All variants and modified versions of Thompson submachine guns even semiautomatic only versions are prohibited by name in Canada as part of Prohibited Weapons Order No 13 in 1995 Consequently they cannot be legally imported or owned except under very limited circumstances For example to own one the person must be grandfathered and have owned one before the bill was passed against it The submachine gun is not grandfathered like in the U S only the owner The submachine gun can only be sold to other grandfathered individuals this keeps prices extremely low as the number of permitted licensed individuals is very small and dwindling with time Eventually all prohibited guns will be out of circulation 73 Part 1 86 74 United States Edit Firing the 1921 Thompson The perceived popularity of submachine guns such as the Thompson with violent gangsters in the 1920s and 1930s was one of the main reasons given for passage of the National Firearms Act by the United States Congress in 1934 One of its provisions was that owners of fully automatic firearms were required to register them with the predecessor agency of the modern Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives ATF The law also placed restrictions on the possession transfer and transport of the weapons There are several U S made automatic and semi automatic variants copies or replicas The semi automatic versions are less regulated by federal law United Kingdom Edit The possession of any fully automatic firearm is prohibited in the UK by the Firearms Act 1968 prohibited firearms can be possessed on a section 5 certificate but these are not issued for sporting purposes A fully automatic firearm that has been converted to semi automatic fire such as the Model 1927 is prohibited by the Firearms Act 1988 as is any centre fire purpose made semi automatic weapon such as the Model 1927A1 It is now effectively impossible for a firearm of this type to be legally possessed by a member of the general public except in certified deactivated condition or where specifically manufactured as a semi automatic in caliber 22LR Germany Edit The gun in a government approved semiautomatic conversion or clone can legally be owned by hunters and sport shooters With a design date prior to 1942 it is not considered a weapon of war Only the fully automatic version is a prohibited weapon As a long gun it can be bought by hunters even if it cannot be used to actually hunt for legal reasons There are disciplines in government approved sport shooting rulebooks that allow this type to be used therefore the gun can be bought by sport shooters too Users Edit Algeria 75 Argentina M1928 and M1 Thompson 76 Belgium Used by the Belgian Army and Gendarmerie post WW2 and it remained in service with the Gendarmerie until 1971 77 78 Bolivia 79 Brazil Adopted by the Pernambuco military police and used against messianic cultists during the 1938 Pau de Colher massacre 80 The M1 was Used by the Brazilian forces from WWII 81 until the mid 1980s British India Widely used by the Indian Army in the Malayan Campaign 82 in the European theatre 83 and Burma Campaigns Canada 84 Cuba 85 People s Republic of China Unlicensed copies 86 87 Republic of China 5 Croatia 4 Egypt 88 Ethiopia M1928A1 and M1 issued to Ethiopian forces during the Korean War 89 France 86 The M1928A1 was used as the Pistolet mitrailleur 11 mm 43 C 45 M 28 A1 90 The M1A1 was also used 91 Germany US supplied Thompsons were used by the Bundeswehr before the adoption of the G3 92 Greece Used by Greek armed forces resistance fighters Gendarmerie and police units during World War II and immediately postwar period 50 93 Guatemala 94 Haiti 95 Honduras 96 Iraq Iraqi insurgents 12 Imperial State of Iran Used by the Imperial Iranian Guard Units first saw action during the Iran crisis of 1946 97 India 98 page needed Israel 49 Italy Captured examples pressed into use by the Italian Army prior to September 8 1943 99 Also supplied to partisans and to the Italian Co belligerent Army 100 After the war it was mostly issued to Italian Air Force troopers 101 and the Carabinieri 102 Japan Were used in some quantities by the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force 103 unreliable source Jordan 8 Kingdom of Laos Limited received by U S government and used during the First Indochina War and Vietnam War 104 Luxembourg M1A1 in service 1952 1967 replaced by Uzi 105 Malaysia 9 The Netherlands In early World War II at least 3 680 Thompsons acquired through Lend Lease 24 New Zealand M1928 and M1928A1 106 Nicaragua 107 The Nicaraguan National Guard received M1928A1s and some were captured by Sandino s rebels 108 North Korea Chinese made Thompsons used by the Korean People s Army in the Korean War 109 North Vietnam Unlicensed copies 86 Used by Viet Minh in the First Indochina War 6 Panama M1928A1 Formerly used by the Panamanian National Guard and used by Dignity Battalion militia of the defunct Panama Defense Forces 110 Poland Used by the Polish Armed Forces in the West during WWII 111 and by resistance fighters during the Warsaw Uprising from supply drops Portugal Small number bought for police use designated m 1928 112 Somalia 113 South Vietnam 4 Soviet Union In 1924 a large number of M1921s was purchased through Mexico and issued to NKVD and border guards 137 729 were received through Lend Lease in WW2 114 115 Sweden 116 Turkey Received US surplus guns after WW2 117 United Kingdom First issued to the GHQ Liaison Unit Phantom in February 1940 in advance of main War Office contracts 118 United States Employed by the United States Marine Corps 28 and by the United States Army 1938 119 including paratroops in World War II Vietnam Used by Viet Cong during Vietnam War 120 Venezuela 121 Yugoslavia 11 Non state groups Edit The Provisional IRA and Official IRA used the 1921 variant mainly during the early 1960s to 1970s 122 123 The Angry Brigade 124 Azerbaijan People s Government 97 Afghan Mujahideen 125 The Communist Party of Estonia received four Thompsons from the Soviet Union before the failed 1924 coup 33 The Turkish Resistance Organization manufactured its own copies with parts supplied by Turkey 117 See also EditList of U S Army weapons by supply catalog designation SNL A 32References Edit The Sandino Rebellion 1927 1934 Sandinorebellion com Retrieved 2011 12 25 Diario de la Guerra de Honduras 30 de enero 30 de abril 1924 Mario Rivas a b Hart 2003 pp 187 188 a b c d e Bishop Chris 1998 Guns in Combat Chartwell Books Inc p page needed ISBN 0 7858 0844 2 a b McNab 2002 p 47 a b Windrow Martin 15 Nov 1998 The French Indochina War 1946 54 Men at Arms 322 Osprey Publishing p 24 ISBN 9781855327894 Sazanidis 1995 pp 293 294 a b Laffin John 15 Jun 1982 Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars 1948 73 Men at Arms 128 Osprey Publishing p 32 ISBN 9780850454512 a b Weapons of the Malay CTs 1948 1960 17thdivision tripod com a b Hart 2003 p 191 a b c Dyker David A Vejvoda Ivan 9 December 1996 Yugoslavia and After A Study in Fragmentation Despair and Rebirth 1st ed London Routledge p 120 ISBN 9781317891352 a b Small Arms Survey 2012 Surveying the Battlefield Illicit Arms In Afghanistan Iraq and Somalia Small Arms Survey 2012 Moving Targets Cambridge University Press p 321 ISBN 978 0 521 19714 4 Archived from the original PDF on August 30 2012 Yenne 2009 p page needed a b c d e War Department 1943 10 11 TM 9 2200 Small Arms Light Field Mortars and 20 mm Aircraft Guns War Department p 59 a b c War Department 1943 10 11 TM 9 2200 Small Arms Light Field Mortars and 20 mm Aircraft Guns War Department p 57 Full Power Full Auto The Thompson Goes Metric And the MP5 Goes American www americanrifleman org Thompson 1921 Submachine Gun Modern Firearms 27 October 2010 a b Schroeder Michael J 2019 03 26 Digital Resources The Sandino Rebellion Digital Historical Archive Nicaragua 1927 1934 Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199366439 013 77 ISBN 978 0 19 936643 9 retrieved 2021 07 05 a b Bearse 1994 p 210 a b c Iannamico Frank 1999 The U S M3 M3A1 Submachine Gun Harmony Maine Moose Lake Publishing pp 14 55 ISBN 978 0 9701954 4 9 a b James Gary 1996 2006 Development of the Thompson Submachine Gun Hatcher Julian S 1947 Hatcher s Notebook Military Service Publishing Co p 44 The Unofficial Tommy Gun Page www nfatoys com a b c d Iannamico 2000 p page needed Fitzsimons 1977 p 272 Gudmundsson Bruce 1995 Stormtroop Tactics Innovation in the German Army 1914 1918 Praeger Press page needed Smithsonian National Postal Museum Archived 2007 06 11 at the Wayback Machine Postal Inspectors The Silent Service Unexpected Duties The Postal Inspection Service became the first law enforcement agency to purchase the Thompson submachine gun a b c d Fitzsimons 1977 p 2487 a b c Bert Kortegaard 2000 09 21 M1A1 Thompson Submachine Gun Rt66 com Archived from the original on 2011 12 17 Retrieved 2011 12 25 Association National Rifle An Official Journal Of The NRA Guns of the Battle of Blair Mountain An Official Journal Of The NRA Retrieved 2022 12 02 Ryan Meda 2003 Tom Barry IRA Freedom Fighter Mercier Press p 125 ISBN 1 85635 425 3 Hart 2003 pp 184 185 a b Otchet strelkovogo poligona pistolet pulemet Tompsona kalashnikov media in Russian Retrieved 2022 11 24 Ashcroft Brent St Valentine s Day Massacre Tale of two guns WZZM 13 News permanent dead link Thompson Model 1928 Submachine Gun National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2008 06 12 Helmer William J 1969 The Gun That Made the Twenties Roar MacMillan p page needed ISBN 978 0 02 550890 3 a b c Robert Bo Ramsour II The FBI and the Thompson Submachine Gun Soldier of Fortune magazine July 18 2010 page needed Mello Frederico Pernambucano de 2011 Guerreiros do sol violencia e banditismo no Nordeste do Brasil 5a edicao revista e atualizada ed Sao Paulo p 332 ISBN 978 85 63610 05 8 OCLC 879852051 Bruce Canfield Thompson Submachine Gun The Tommy Gun Goes to War American Rifleman Retrieved 2016 02 04 Iannamico 2000 pp 161 173 175 Iannamico 2000 pp 94 97 Webster David K Parachute Infantry page needed Bishop Chris 1998 The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II New York Orbis Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7607 1022 7 page needed Moremon John 2022 The Tommy Gun in Jungle Warfare The Use and Usefulness of the Thompson Submachine Gun for Australian Soldiers on the Kokoda Trail New Guinea 1942 Vulcan The Journal of the History of Military Technology 9 1 84 117 doi 10 1163 22134603 09010005 Chapter XII Guadalcanal NZETC nzetc victoria ac nz Bearse 1994 p 213 George 1981 p 400 Yenne 2009 p 263 a b Uzi Eilam 2011 Eilam s Arc How Israel Became a Military Technology Powerhouse Sussex Academic Press p 7 a b Sazanidis 1995 pp 293 295 Bloomfield Lincoln P Leiss Amelia Catherine 30 June 1967 The Control of local conflict a design study on arms control and limited war in the developing areas PDF Vol 3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for International Studies pp 81 89 hdl 2027 uiug 30112064404368 Archived PDF from the original on August 4 2020 Bloomfield amp Leiss 1967 p 191 de Quesada Alejandro 10 Jan 2009 The Bay of Pigs Cuba 1961 Elite 166 pp 9 60 61 ISBN 9781846033230 12 Viet Cong Homemade Thompson Submachine Gun www williammaloney com Archived from the original on 2019 01 18 Retrieved 2018 05 13 Vanderpool Bill October 2013 Bring Enough Gun American Rifleman pp 80 85 amp 115 116 Fitzsimons 1977 p 2488 Rice Glenn E 210K for Bonnie amp Clyde Tommy Gun shotgun The Kansas City Star Archived 2013 12 14 at the Wayback Machine 21 Jan 2012 a b Dunlap 1948 p 299 a b George 1981 p 395 Pegler 2010 p 26 The Ultimate Thompson Book by Tracie L Hill Thompson Tommy Gun SMG 30 Carbine Version 20 October 2016 Gun Johnson Cara 27 June 2022 The Gun That Made The 20s Roar Inside The Blood Soaked History Of The Infamous Tommy Gun All That s Interesting Retrieved 5 July 2022 Small Arms Review Vol 26 No 5 p 35 Thompson Gallery www MachineGunBooks com Retrieved 2011 12 25 Pamyat naroda Poisk dokumentov chastej Experimental Thompson Stock Forgotten Weapons 2012 12 07 M1 Vs M1A1 Thompson Submachine Gun Cyclic rate Iannamico 2000 p 21 Submachine guns of UK BSA Thompson 1926 Thompson 1928A1 Lanchester Sten and Sterling Gotavapen se 2010 09 08 Retrieved 2011 12 25 Archived copy img822 imageshack us Archived from the original on 6 February 2012 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link List of Restricted and Prohibited Firearms Canadian Firearms Centre CFC Prohibited Firearms Archived 2007 08 20 at the Wayback Machine Canadian Firearms Centre CFC Windrow Martin 1997 The Algerian War 1954 62 Men at Arms 312 London Osprey Publishing p 46 ISBN 978 1 85532 658 3 Smith 1969 p 194 Dumortier M 1953 Technische Gids voor Infanterie Onderofficier Infanterieschool pp BW 16 BW 20 Bals Robert Buts Leo Pets Jef Handvuurwapens van de Belgische Rijkswacht PDF Erfgoedgilde Retrieved 1 June 2022 Scarlata Paul May 2014 La Guerra del Chaco fighting in El Infierno Verde Part 2 tanks airplanes submachine guns all played a role in this bloody conflict over some of the world s most godforsaken real estate Shotgun News MEMoRIA E IDENTIDADE NA TRAJEToRIA DOS oRFAOS DE PAU DE COLHER ACONTECIMENTOS PESSOAS LUGARES Revista Historiar Retrieved 2022 09 23 Maximiano Cesar Bonalume Ricardo N 2011 Brazilian Expeditionary Force in World War II Men at Arms 465 Osprey Publishing p 45 ISBN 9781849084833 McNab 2002 p 131 McNab 2002 p 133 Thompson Submachine Gun www canadiansoldiers com Retrieved 2009 09 22 Yenne 2009 pp 111 114 a b c Charles H Smith History of the Thompson submachine gun Archived from the original on 2009 03 08 Retrieved 2009 09 22 M1A1 Thompson submachine gun Archived from the original on 2011 12 17 Retrieved 2009 09 22 Avtomat Tompson kalibr 45 Sajt pro oruzhie oruzhie vseh vremen i narodov vidy oruzhiya 2012 09 25 ROYAL TIGER IMPORTS ETHIOPIAN ARMS Manuel du Grade TTA 116 in French Berger Levrault 1956 03 19 p 274 L armement francais en A F N Gazette des Armes in French No 220 March 1992 pp 12 16 Germany and the U S M1 Carbine McNab 2002 p 123 Police Small Arms Arsenals in the Northern Central American Triangle Small Arms Defense Journal Vol 7 no 5 4 December 2015 Gander Terry J Hogg Ian V Jane s Infantry Weapons 1995 1996 Jane s Information Group 21 edition May 1995 ISBN 978 0 7106 1241 0 page needed Honduras Country Handbook PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2021 10 21 a b Silah Report Podcast V33 Iranian Submachine Guns 1941 1979 21 June 2021 McNab 2002 Bir El Gobi la battaglia Digilander libero it Retrieved 2011 12 25 Romain Rainero Antonello Biagini L Italia in guerra Il 6 anno 1945 published by Commissione italiana di storia militare 1996 page needed As pictured in the book Ho vestito in azzurro by Nicola Malizia IBN 2005 page needed As mentioned in a notorious reportage on the death of outlaw Salvatore Giuliano http www ilcassetto it notizia php tid 148 Archived 2013 10 16 at the Wayback Machine 自衛隊の銃器各種 jieitaisaiyou web fc2 com in Japanese Archived from the original on 6 March 2017 Conboy Kenneth 23 Nov 1989 The War in Laos 1960 75 Men at Arms 217 Osprey Publishing p 15 ISBN 9780850459388 Grand Duchy Of Luxembourg Mnhm lu Archived from the original on 2011 01 26 Retrieved 2011 12 25 Stack Wayne O Sullivan Barry 20 Mar 2013 The New Zealand Expeditionary Force in World War II Men at Arms 486 Osprey Publishing p 46 ISBN 9781780961118 Pegler 2010 p 56 Jowett Philip 28 Jun 2018 Latin American Wars 1900 1941 Banana Wars Border Wars amp Revolutions Men at Arms 519 Osprey Publishing pp 44 45 ISBN 9781472826282 11mm Submachine Gun China Rottman Gordon 2010 Panama 1989 90 Elite Vol 37 Osprey Publishing pp 14 15 57 62 63 ISBN 9781855321564 Zaloga Steven J 1982 The Polish Army 1939 45 Men at Arms 117 Osprey Publishing pp 22 38 ISBN 9780850454178 Revista Militar Revistas As Industrias Militares e As Armas de Fogo in Portuguese Revistamilitar pt 2010 05 28 Archived from the original on 2012 03 27 Retrieved 2011 12 25 La fusillade de Loyada Quelle balle a tue Le Monde in French No 9660 12 February 1976 p 7 Forgotten History of Thompson SMG in Secret Police and Army of Soviet Russia Maxim Popenker Thompson Submachine Gun World Guns Submachine guns of Sweden a b TURKISH THOMPSON SUBMACHINE GUNS Atkin Malcolm 2015 Fighting Nazi Occupation British Resistance 1939 1945 Pen and Sword p 80 ISBN 978 1 47383 377 7 Miller David 2001 The Illustrated Directory of 20th Century Guns Salamander Books Ltd ISBN 1 84065 245 4 page needed Viet Cong Weaponry 14 Small Arms From the Vietnam War 22 October 2015 Legendarios FAV Club 2013 12 18 Archived from the original on 2020 04 14 Retrieved 2017 02 24 Paul V Walsh The Irish Civil War 1922 1923 Archived from the original on 2006 05 08 Retrieved 2009 09 22 O Brien Brendan 1993 The Long War The IRA and Sinn Fein 1985 to Today Syracuse University Press pp 279 ISBN 978 0 8156 0319 1 Dobson Christopher Payne Ronald 1982 The Terrorists Their Weapons Leaders and Tactics Facts on File p 101 The American Tommy Gun In The Pak Afghan Region Report Silah Report 25 May 2021 Retrieved 2022 02 28 Bibliography Edit Albert David and Sig Mike 2005 Thompson Manuals Catalogs and Other Paper Items Self Published Bannan James F and Hill Tracie L 1989 Notes On Auto Ordnance South West Publishing Co Bearse Ray 1994 The Thompson Submachine Gun Weapon of War and Peace In Murtz Harold A ed Gun Digest Treasury 7th ed DBI Books ISBN 978 0873491563 Burrough Bryan 2004 Public Enemies America s Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI The Penguin Press Cox Roger A 1982 The Thompson Submachine Gun Law Enforcement Ordnance Company Dunlap Roy F 1948 Ordnance Went Up Front Samworth Press Ellis Chris 1998 The Thompson Submachine Gun Military Book Club Fitzsimons Bernard 1977 The illustrated encyclopedia of 20th century weapons and warfare Phoebus OCLC 18501210 George John Lt Col 1981 1948 Shots Fired In Anger 2 ed NRA Press ISBN 978 0935998429 Hart Peter 2003 The I R A at War 1916 1923 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199277865 Herigstad Gordon 1996 Colt Thompson Serial Numbers Self published Hill Tracie L 1996 Thompson The American Legend Collector Grade Publications Hill Tracie L 2009 The Ultimate Thompson Book Collector Grade Publications Hogg Ian V and Weeks John 1989 Military Small Arms of the 20th Century DBI Books Inc Huon Jean 1995 Les pistolets mitrailleurs Thompson Barnett Editions also Editions Crepin LeBlond Iannamico Frank 2000 American Thunder The Military Thompson Submachine Gun Moose Lake Publishing Iannamico Frank 2003 The Colt Thompson Submachine Gun The Shotgun News Treasury Issue Volume 4 Primedia Publishing Iannamico Frank 2004 American Thunder II The Military Thompson Submachine Gun Moose Lake Publishing Iannamico Frank 2004 United States Submachine Guns Moose Lake Publishing Johnson Melvin M and Haven Charles J 1941 Automatic Arms William Morrow and Co Linton Peter The Machinist s Guide to the Thompson Submachine Gun 2012 Gun Show Books Publishing ISBN 978 0 9787086 2 7 McNab Chris 2002 20th Century Military Uniforms 2nd ed Kent Grange Books ISBN 978 1 84013 476 6 Moremon John 2022 The Tommy Gun in Jungle Warfare The Use and Usefulness of the Thompson Submachine Gun for Australian Soldiers on the Kokoda Trail New Guinea 1942 Vulcan The Journal of the History of Military Technology 9 1 84 117 doi https doi org 10 1163 22134603 09010005 Nelson Thomas B 1963 The World s Submachine Guns Volume I International Small Arms Publishers Pegler Martin 2010 The Thompson Submachine Gun From Prohibition Chicago to World War II Weapon 1 Osprey Publishing ISBN 9781849081498 in Portuguese Olive Ronaldo 1996 Guia Internacional de Submetralhadoras Editora Magnum Ltda in Greek Sazanidis Christos 1995 Ta opla twn Ellhnwn Arms of the Greeks in Greek Thessaloniki Greece Maiandros ISBN 978 960 90213 0 2 Sharpe Philip B The Thompson Sub Machine Gun in Police Science Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 1931 1951 Vol 23 No 6 Mar Apr 1933 pp 1098 1114 Smith Charles H A brief story of Auto Ordnance Company Smith Joseph E 1969 Small Arms of the World 11 ed Harrisburg PA The Stackpole Company ISBN 9780811715669 Sturmgewehr by R Blake Stevens Collector Grade Publications 2004 Thompsons in Weimar Germany ISBN 0889353565 9780889353565 Weeks John 1980 World War II Small Arms Galahad Books Wilson R K 1943 Textbook of Automatic Pistols Small Arms Technical Publishing Company Yenne Bill 2009 Tommy Gun How General Thompson s Submachine Gun Wrote History New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 38326 8 340 pages contains black and white photographs and illustrations External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to M1 Thompson Auto Ordnance The Official Thompson Collectors Association Page Thompson Submachine Gun Principles of Operation 1943 on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thompson submachine gun amp oldid 1130541028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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