Peak American: the Winchester 1897 Trench Gun in WW1

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @ForgottenWeapons
    @ForgottenWeapons  Рік тому +131

    Get Entered to WIN this original 1897 Trench Gun!
    go.getenteredtowin.com/forgottenweapons
    DEADLINE to ENTER is 09/29/23 @ 11:59pm (PST).

    • @SC-qg8wp
      @SC-qg8wp Рік тому

      From official rules: Do not enter this Sweepstakes if you
      are not a USA resident. www.getenteredtowin.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Winchester-Trench-Shotgun-Sweepstakes-Official-Rules-8.31.23.docx.pdf

    • @ragedump
      @ragedump Рік тому +18

      Boo, have to buy a coffee mug for entry.

    • @KaiziGarden
      @KaiziGarden Рік тому +4

      How you gonna deal with the FG-42 winner in NY? Does FG-42 legal in the NY?

    • @Uua994
      @Uua994 Рік тому

      Ian, do they ship it into Finland?!?

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  Рік тому +33

      @KaiziGarden The winner was an LEO, who is not subject to their rules. I think it's wrong for LEOs to not be subject to the same rules as everyone else, but that's tangential to the question.

  • @thegoldencaulk2742
    @thegoldencaulk2742 Рік тому +2495

    This is like the polar opposite of a Forgotten Weapon. This is an unforgettable weapon.

  • @grayharker6271
    @grayharker6271 Рік тому +1170

    In the early 70s, as a young private at Ft Ord, we were issued these shotguns for post guard guard duty. During familiarizing myself, I slam fired a full magazine. I was immediately pulled off the firing line by the range officer. He had no idea you could do that with one of these!!

    • @ETC_Rohaly_USCG
      @ETC_Rohaly_USCG Рік тому +146

      My Uncle was at Ft. Ord during Vietnam. You’re only the second person I’ve heard of that was stationed there.
      Sad to see what became of it 😢

    • @JuddKramer
      @JuddKramer Рік тому +57

      @@ETC_Rohaly_USCG BRAC really impacted a lot of communities when the bases were shut. I have family around the former Plattsburgh, Rome, and Loring AFB's who remember the subsequent downturn.

    • @adamcuneo7189
      @adamcuneo7189 Рік тому +74

      Fun fact: Clint Eastwood was actually stationed at Ft Ord when he was in the Army from 1951 to 1953.

    • @ETC_Rohaly_USCG
      @ETC_Rohaly_USCG Рік тому +32

      @@JuddKramer yeah I remember how it impacted El Toro naval air station, and Orange County and the fight that ensued for years about what to do with the land

    • @ETC_Rohaly_USCG
      @ETC_Rohaly_USCG Рік тому +45

      @@adamcuneo7189 bonus fact: Jeff Bridges (aka: The Dude) was a Coastie. Look up the meme, “the Coast Guard will make you crazy by the time you’re done” lol
      Too true! 😂

  • @BonesCapone
    @BonesCapone Рік тому +677

    Fun fact: Winchester actually kept detailed logs of production dates and serial number ranges. It fell by the way side during both WWs, but was picked up again in the interwar and postwar eras.
    I have one that was produced in 1947, but does have US Armory stamps, meaning it likely saw service during the Korean War. They produced model 1897s until sometime in the '60s.

    • @komradechampa348
      @komradechampa348 Рік тому +4

      Not sure thats a "fun fact" so much as it is common knowledge?

    • @Skonnchy
      @Skonnchy Рік тому +108

      @@komradechampa348 I found that fact to be fun

    • @brentchurches4361
      @brentchurches4361 Рік тому +50

      I also think it is a fun fact and not so much common knowledge. Thank you for that information.

    • @sixoffive
      @sixoffive Рік тому +9

      Someone told me that they saw limited service in Vietnam too?

    • @ronprice9921
      @ronprice9921 Рік тому

      also no mention of John Brownings genius design @@komradechampa348

  • @BrandonDoran00
    @BrandonDoran00 Рік тому +809

    The old video of Ian dressed in uniform with the trenchgun, swearing about the hypocrisy of the Germans calling shotguns a war crime, meanwhile using mustard gas all across Europe, is a classic that I regularly revisit.

    • @Smurfman256
      @Smurfman256 Рік тому

      Germany in WWI: "Buckshot is evil and inhumane!"
      Also Germany in WWI: *sprays people with burning sticky gasoline*

    • @madsclausen4028
      @madsclausen4028 Рік тому +14

      Link?

    • @wurzel9671
      @wurzel9671 Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/Z0D6p3w2qgY/v-deo.html@@madsclausen4028

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Рік тому +30

      I like Garand Thumb's version where he's in a Doughboy uniform putting an 1897 through its paces.

    • @BrandonDoran00
      @BrandonDoran00 Рік тому

      @@madsclausen4028 ua-cam.com/video/Z0D6p3w2qgY/v-deo.html

  • @chris.3711
    @chris.3711 Рік тому +351

    A year ago I helped a woman go through her late husband's gun collection. To my absolute shock, I pulled out a WW2 1897, with heat shield. The story behind it was that was the gun he ran for his cowboy competition. He probably bought it cheap and used it in competition for decades. I wanted that gun so bad, but I couldn't meet the value at the time out of fairness to her.

    • @connor3284
      @connor3284 Рік тому +67

      You're a better man than me! I would have asked what she wanted for it right on the spot haha.

    • @timontide6404
      @timontide6404 Рік тому +37

      You did the right thing.

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Рік тому +12

      I love seeing the trench guns (whether real or repro) at Wild Bunch matches... I have always thought however that it should be MANDATORY to use them WITH bayonet! (Rather than prohibited by the rules lol)

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Рік тому +27

      I would have taken it in exchange for helping her.
      Friend of mine, when he was kid in the 1980's took a BAR in exchange for helping a guy pick up and install a water heater. It was in the basement, he asked about it. Guy said it was left behind by an old roommate. He took it instead of cash. Didn't know what it was. Opened it up on fulll auto on his farm. Dad came running out and took it away. Dad sold it.
      I helped a co worker when her husband died. All he had was a .22 hand gun and rifle.
      Why can't I find a BAR or a WWI 1897 trench gun?

    • @rossfromfriends8468
      @rossfromfriends8468 Рік тому +5

      I had a similar experience but it was a dragunov and a couple retro ARS.

  • @Bazzooka1518
    @Bazzooka1518 Рік тому +421

    Last time I was this early the Archduke was still getting in his car on June 28th 1914

    • @johnmurphy7108
      @johnmurphy7108 Рік тому +11

      LMAO CLASSIC

    • @IrishMcScottish
      @IrishMcScottish Рік тому +8

      Accurate, I was there lol

    • @gabespiro8902
      @gabespiro8902 Рік тому +12

      Last time I was this early, there had only been 2 battles of the Isonzo

    • @792slayer
      @792slayer Рік тому +17

      "Take me out."
      Franz Ferdinand

    • @babablacksheep3950
      @babablacksheep3950 Рік тому +3

      I was there with ma boi Gavrilo eating Schiller's luscious sandwich.

  • @someguy3766
    @someguy3766 Рік тому +876

    Shotgun = cruel and inhumane. Flamethrower = perfectly fine.

    • @24kachina
      @24kachina Рік тому +134

      And don't forget mustard and chlorine gasses!

    • @Kevin-mx1vi
      @Kevin-mx1vi Рік тому +117

      Yep. "It's really effective but we didn't think of it first so it's cheating".

    • @nextcaesargaming5469
      @nextcaesargaming5469 Рік тому +47

      To be perfectly fair, being hypocritical doesn't make you factually wrong, it just makes you an ass. Just because the guys using flamethrowers and poison gas (which EVERYONE was using) were complaining about shotguns, that doesn't mean shotty's aren't worthy of warcrime status. Hollowpoints (which are a warcrime) are less nasty than buckshot, so in this case, the hypocrites have a point.

    • @nextcaesargaming5469
      @nextcaesargaming5469 Рік тому +16

      Then again, I'm an unironic fan of William T. Sherman and Winston Churchill; I'm not in any better position to complain about shotguns.

    • @itsconnorstime
      @itsconnorstime Рік тому +17

      @@nextcaesargaming5469 do it again uncle Billy!

  • @aaronmiedema7917
    @aaronmiedema7917 Рік тому +174

    The gap between the bayonet and the shroud over the barrel also suggest functionality in bayonet fighting. The US Army was using Canadian bayonet manuals for training. These manuals included very close range attack which was an upward jab under the chin. This gap and shroud would have made it possible to execute this technique.

    • @nomoneyglobal
      @nomoneyglobal Рік тому +41

      Exactly it fits the hand like brass knuckles with your other hand on the neck of the stock, you can carve, spear, jab, bludgeon, punch, thrust, etc. Super effective. Surprised Ian didn't touch on that because I've read that is the reasoning for that particular shape.

    • @theTOASTYsupreme
      @theTOASTYsupreme 10 місяців тому +5

      Basically a buckshot slinging spear lol

  • @B1rd0fpr3y
    @B1rd0fpr3y Рік тому +85

    The most aesthetically pleasing gun out there. Its just peak "old school cool"

  • @johnzebelean855
    @johnzebelean855 Рік тому +33

    I had a Model 1897 in Vietnam. I carried double 00 buck shot, but didn't have a bayonet for it. I left it hanging on the wall of my hooch in when I left in February 1973.

    • @drewmetz389
      @drewmetz389 8 місяців тому

      Thank you for your service.

    • @SaladofStones
      @SaladofStones 5 місяців тому

      @@drewmetz389 If only his service mattered to anything thanks to our lack of politicla will. Millions of South Vietnamese in camps, Moutain-Yards genocided. And we say we are the good guys when we abandon our allies left and right

    • @natwolf687
      @natwolf687 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@SaladofStones If you were really passionate about whatever it is you're trying to say here, you might want to learn to write clearly.

  • @666toysoldier
    @666toysoldier Рік тому +26

    Interesting reference to Shrapnel shell. Contrary to common usage where fragments from any exploding shell is called shrapnel, the original Shrapnel shell, invented by Lieutenant Henry Shrapnel in 1784 and termed 'spherical case shot', carried musket balls in a case with an exploding charge. A Shrapnel shell for the British 60-pounder of WWI carried "about 990 bullets , 35 to the pound." Effectively, one hell of a big, long-range shotgun.

  • @anonymousm9113
    @anonymousm9113 Рік тому +27

    Working for a large outdoor retailer as a Gun Vault Specialist, I got to accompany our Used Gun Lead on an offsite appraisal and purchase. Most of the guns were older hunting guns, but a few caught my eye. There was a chromed M1886 Mannlicher with Chilean export marks. I thought it was an M1888 at first, but educated myself while he was meticulously examining the other guns. There was also a Khyber Pass Martini-Enfield copy that we had to pass on due to safety issues. I honed in on three of the guns: an 1897, 1892, and an M1 Carbine with a cheesy looking stock.
    The 1897 is an original Riot version (but not the military Trench Gun, lacking the heat shield and bayonet lug). The serial number puts it at an 1899 production.
    The 1892 is chambered in .38 WCF and its serial number puts it as 1894 production.
    The M1 is an Inland manufactured one, made in late 1941 or early 1942, and the stock turned out to be an original 1960s Owens wire stock, as seen in one of the photos of the Symbionese Liberation Army.

  • @oklahomahank2378
    @oklahomahank2378 10 місяців тому +4

    Many years ago I read the letters home of a young lieutenant in the Philippines. His father bought him an 1897 and told him to take it with him everywhere, including dinner and the head. .

  • @skullfracture2
    @skullfracture2 Рік тому +17

    I found one of these disassembled mostly complete in a cabinet that was in my grandpa’s garage. I reassembled it as much as I could but I’ll have to buy some parts to complete it. It will be a wall hanger. The production date is 1913. Pretty cool, I think.

  • @Sedan57Chevy
    @Sedan57Chevy Рік тому +376

    Man, your old 1897 trench gun video, where you were in uniform and bashing the germans for their complaints about the trench gun, is one of those videos I still go back to. This is the better historical/informational video, but the other one is just American as hell and absolutely funny.

    • @Afropreusse
      @Afropreusse Рік тому

      Amerikanisch = Kriegsverbrechen
      Sehr treffend formuliert.

    • @adamcuneo7189
      @adamcuneo7189 Рік тому

      Well the Germans were a bunch of hypocrites because they used things like mustard gas, and were allied with the Ottomans who were responsible for the Armenian Genocide.

    • @brittakriep2938
      @brittakriep2938 Рік тому +12

      Why do you not write the fact, that between 1815 and long into 1980s, no shotguns had been used as service weapon. Only in 1830s/ 1840s few of southern german states bought a small number of percussion side by side shotguns. They had been sometimes handed to the up to 1890s/1900s only saberarmed policemen, mostly when fighting poachery, or escort a large number of prisoners to a prison.
      The 19th/20th century german/austrian counterpart to US Wild West literature had been novels, in which either a Forrest Service official ( Förster) or a lawfull licenced huntsman fights poachers , smugglers or other criminals in the Woods. The heroic characters are armed with rifles, while shotguns, when appearing, had been the weapons of the criminals.
      Perhaps you now understand, that german soldiers of wwl saw shotguns not as service weapons, but as weapons, used by criminals, so the shotgun armed US soldiers, other ones don' t used them, as criminals.

    • @adamcuneo7189
      @adamcuneo7189 Рік тому +37

      @@brittakriep2938 And using mustard gas and flamethrowers is somehow better?

    • @alreadyblack3341
      @alreadyblack3341 Рік тому

      @@brittakriep2938 Well maybe you can understand how that DOESN'T FUCKING MATTER. The U.S. came into war to end the bullshit, not to kowtow to the same fucking people who had no problem starting a World War in the first place.

  • @Phantom_Vader
    @Phantom_Vader Рік тому +42

    Man, the one you reviewed is in FANTASTIC condition for being almost a century old! It's always wonderful to see such TLC into preserving a piece of history. I can just picture a young American GI death-gripping that gun from within his trench, waiting for the signal to go over the top. Amazing.

    • @zchris87v80
      @zchris87v80 Рік тому

      A friend’s neighbor picked one up at a show, got to hold that beast. $5k back in 2012 or so.

  • @jonathanwarchild
    @jonathanwarchild Рік тому +130

    I'll just be honest and say hearing "slamfire" makes me perk up. The trench shotty is the most iconic shotgun and I love it.

    • @hughgrection3052
      @hughgrection3052 Рік тому +7

      It actually helps a ton if a person is pumped up on adrenaline and loses fine motor skills. Not having to time the release and pull of the trigger is a huge benefit.
      I have a rare Model 12 Heavy duck that does it and I love it

    • @RedZeppelinAirship
      @RedZeppelinAirship Рік тому +7

      @@hughgrection3052 Have one too. Does yours have the ribbed Simmons barrel or the ribbed factory barrel?
      Mine sadly does not have a rib, bought it at a random pawn shop for $650 a few years ago, and funnily enough they actually had 3 of them on the shelves.
      Looking back I should've also bought the Ithaca M37 that was on the shelves too, but I didn't wanna miss a car payment.

    • @hughgrection3052
      @hughgrection3052 Рік тому +4

      @RZeppelin Mine is actually the even more rare model with the solid rib on top. Its a shame someone cut it down. But it's also what caught my eye on it when it was on the shelf. The typical standard Model 12 has the long sort of ugly barrel look. This one tho had the cool riot gun look to it. I payed just 450 for it. They're the hands down best combat shotguns even till this very day. It even cycles mini shells with no need for an adapter. Beautiful gun tho with lots of heavy wear on it and character.
      I too would like to own an Ithaca in the same riot setup or trench. I'm not sure how I feel yet about the downwards ejection tho. Seems like a slip and trip hazard indoors on hard floors to eject cases there. They're crazy cool too tho.
      I wish a company would make modern tactical furniture for the Model 12s tho. I'd buy up them all of so and cut them down and turn them into little beasts.
      Does yours have the red stock rubber pad?

    • @hughgrection3052
      @hughgrection3052 Рік тому +1

      @@RedZeppelinAirship Since yours has no rib tho ya may be able to mount a heatshield on yours tho?

    • @RedZeppelinAirship
      @RedZeppelinAirship Рік тому +5

      @@hughgrection3052 My Model 12 3IN is a full 32 Inch long barrel, and I don't intend on cutting it down because it is completely original with a very good B+ blued finish.
      If I ever found one already at 18IN mark I would purchase it in a heartbeat (so long as it isn't more then $600) or if I got one that was in very poor condition and I could look past the surface condition to cut it down to 18 or 20 inches.
      Mine has the original red rubber butt pad too, and it still is in a moderately rubbery feel and isn't hard as a rock.
      Too bad Norinco is banned in the USA, I would love to get one of their 1897 clones, they are around $350 in Canada and can slamfire. Thats only time I would ever wish to be Canadian is for their Norinco imports, like the type 81 or their cheap shotguns.

  • @SamlSchulze1104
    @SamlSchulze1104 Рік тому +85

    "Sir, the Americans are here"
    "Splendid, what did they bring?"
    "Shotguns and Thompsons"
    "Oh, great. Gangsters and cowboys"

    • @crktritual
      @crktritual 9 місяців тому +7

      Damn right 🤠

    • @MB5rider81
      @MB5rider81 7 місяців тому +1

      That's it ..
      That's all you need

    • @garypulliam3421
      @garypulliam3421 5 місяців тому +1

      *Splendid

    • @SamlSchulze1104
      @SamlSchulze1104 5 місяців тому +2

      @@garypulliam3421 thanks.

    • @michaelkean5969
      @michaelkean5969 5 місяців тому +5

      Yanks charging towards the trenches with Big Iron blaring

  • @argonzificationd.1531
    @argonzificationd.1531 Рік тому +23

    The whole 'slam fire' thing can actually serve as an interesting way to prevent malfunctions. Compared to semiauto guns, pump guns have a strict rhythm of pushing the pump forward, then pulling it backward, then pulling the trigger. Slamfiring not only removes a step from that process, but allows you to avoid the order-of-operations issue that can lead to ejecting live rounds or even short stroking. You could argue that it's just a substitute for proper training, but combined with the faster fire rate, I think the package does give you some interesting capabilities.

    • @dustinbrueggemann1875
      @dustinbrueggemann1875 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, it's a side effect of a solution to the much bigger problem of ensuring the gun can only fire in battery. The AK-47's battery sear is basically the same, but with barrel gas doing the pumping.

    • @The_SmorgMan
      @The_SmorgMan 10 місяців тому +1

      Yeah training could negate the problem, but it’s still more user friendly.
      Either way these things are so cool. We all need one

  • @einarhornraiser9019
    @einarhornraiser9019 Рік тому +15

    This was a terrific presentation. I feel like there should be an Ithaca Model 37 as used in Vietnam video, as well. Just, uh.. just puttin' that out there.

  • @Ghatbkk
    @Ghatbkk Рік тому +27

    Still had 1897s in the arms rooms of the 327th Infantry when I served in the 1980s.

  • @blamokapow137
    @blamokapow137 Рік тому +125

    The Winchester 1897, the shotgun that set the standard for ass kicking in shotguns.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому +3

      Hold up there....the classic coach gun would like a word with you.

    • @bigtasty42069
      @bigtasty42069 Рік тому +9

      ​@@SlavicCeleryNay, laddie. Me gran's ol' blunderbuss does the job right fine, if ye need more'n a single blow, yer a deadman regardless

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому +5

      @@bigtasty42069 Wait a few, a handful of rocks guy is going to show up.

    • @gotsloco1810
      @gotsloco1810 Рік тому +1

      What about one of JMB’s earlier designs the 1887 in 10 gauge

    • @joolsmacgrools1288
      @joolsmacgrools1288 4 місяці тому

      The classic coach gun is definitely pretty badass in its own right.

  • @carlosspeicywiener7018
    @carlosspeicywiener7018 Рік тому +41

    That bayonet mount was also special because it could be used as a secondary grip just for cqb. Imagine holding it like a pugil stick or staff weapon, one hand on the back and one up front, allowing you to swing and strike with the buttplate, slash and stab with the bayonet and use the body of the rifle to parry and block. I can see it being most effective in close quarters situations.

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Рік тому +2

      Dont forget using the bayonet mount as brass knuckles.

    • @georgewhitworth9742
      @georgewhitworth9742 4 місяці тому

      Not gonna lie, this sounds like some fudd lore...

  • @Biggestbingu
    @Biggestbingu Рік тому +10

    My father owns a full size civilian model 1897 and it’s hands down my favorite shotgun I’ve ever fired

  • @The_SmorgMan
    @The_SmorgMan 10 місяців тому +3

    Trench sweeper go *boom
    This is a must have gun for me. Currently saving up for one

  • @rotwang2000
    @rotwang2000 Рік тому +73

    The 1897 Trench Gun is my go to meme whenever something can be solved with a lot of judiciously applied firepower. Things like Huge Spiders, Coconut Crabs, eerie videos showing something weird and scary.
    You may call me a Fudd, but between the M1 Garand, the 1911 and the 1897, you may not pack the latest and tactical supremacy, but you can bring a lot of impressive kaboom to an argument.

  • @acomingextinction
    @acomingextinction Рік тому +8

    Just a magnificent beast of a firearm.

  • @SpacePatrollerLaser
    @SpacePatrollerLaser Рік тому +26

    I have a bayonet that is said to go with a Mossberg shotgun. It resembles the Israeli Mauser 9" bayonet
    In the "old West", shotbuns were used about as much as pistols in gunfights. Especially by "Doc" Holiday

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Рік тому +7

      >shotbun

    • @bufordhighwater9872
      @bufordhighwater9872 Рік тому +3

      Didn't Iced Clantbun usually pair well with Johnnynut Ring-Ohs for part of a complete Curly Bill Breakfast?

    • @SpacePatrollerLaser
      @SpacePatrollerLaser Рік тому +1

      This group should get the award for the most creative use of a typo: It's WAYYY out of control!!! :) OK corral them all

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому

      *Doc Holiday Twerking foes to death*

  • @wallaroo1295
    @wallaroo1295 Рік тому +13

    When I was an MP at Fort Bragg in the late 1990s, we still had these, including bayonets(!) - in the Arms Room for "Riot Control." But... we never took them out for qualification. But they sure were cool to look at!

    • @crowe6961
      @crowe6961 Рік тому

      I mean, this was shortly after the government actually had to deploy the Marines to put down rioting in L.A.
      Also, most angry mobs are not even going to try and charge a bayonet line.

    • @oklahomahank2378
      @oklahomahank2378 10 місяців тому +2

      Riot control used to mean firing light birdshot loads at people’s legs to encourage them to disperse.

    • @brianjones7660
      @brianjones7660 6 місяців тому +1

      picture a guy on guard duty at the entry gate hoiding that while an MP talks to the driver.........instant compliance....

  • @honeybeeharbour1625
    @honeybeeharbour1625 Рік тому +9

    When I was a kid my uncle came home one day carrying an original 1897 trench gun that he later sold to a museum.

  • @Levele1234
    @Levele1234 2 місяці тому +2

    This is the one weapon that everyone would love to have, myself included

  • @DankBurrito420
    @DankBurrito420 Рік тому +20

    I have a history degree with emphasis in WWI and have always obsessed over owning a Winchester 1897! However, considering their rarity and price, I opted for a Mossberg 590 Retrograde.
    I love it for its classic "trench gun" look. Wood stock, heatshield, bayonet lug, etc.. Just can't slam-fire, which I'm okay with. I threw an M7 bayonet, reproduction WWI leather sling, and a reproduction WWI ammo pouch, to compensate lol
    Would still love to win this Winchester 1897 though!

  • @OGColorado
    @OGColorado 9 місяців тому +2

    I just bought a long barrel version of this shotgun. Mine was made in 1923. Not military and no bayonet but in beautiful condition.

  • @boingkster
    @boingkster Рік тому +32

    Living (as always) vicariously through your experiences, Ian! I'd love one of these and always had a bit of a fascination for them. Cheers again for all you do.

  • @Gabthar
    @Gabthar Рік тому +27

    “Bird shot wouldn’t have been effective”
    Ian just shattered the hearts of Fudds everywhere

    • @brivas3343
      @brivas3343 Рік тому +6

      Fudds are the ones that have always been using these shotguns. Nowadays all the tacticool kids think the AR is the answer to whatever question is being asked.

    • @mikebaggott7802
      @mikebaggott7802 Рік тому +3

      @@brivas3343, That's because the AR is the answer in most cases. Lightweight, very accurate, low recoil and high ammo capacity plus lower penetration inside a home, makes it a good choice for home defense. Not to mention the plethora of accessories like weapon mounted lights, suppressors, etc. make it a good choice. Nothing wrong, inherently, with a shotgun for close range work, but an AR is usually a better choice. BTW, lest you think I'm a "tacticool kid" I'm 63 years old.

    • @brivas3343
      @brivas3343 Рік тому +1

      @@mikebaggott7802 How to say you're tacticool without saying you're tacticool.

    • @crowe6961
      @crowe6961 Рік тому +2

      @@brivas3343 Try proving him wrong. You'll have a rough time.

    • @kalefalk5917
      @kalefalk5917 6 місяців тому +2

      Army vet here. My dad have his rock island armory AR shotgun with a 50 round drum loaded with nothing but birdshot which he swears up and down it will rip an attacker to shreds much worse than 00 buck....shit makes me cringe. My 590a1 is plum full of 00 buck. He thinks I'm wrong....smh

  • @caseylawler3257
    @caseylawler3257 Рік тому +7

    I actually found and bought one a few weeks ago. It's missing the heat shield and bayonet but everything else is original. Beautiful gun. The store also had a model 12 as well but I was more interested in the 1897.

  • @messmeister92
    @messmeister92 Рік тому +42

    US Army: “Shotguns are compact enough to be easily wielded in the tenches.”
    Also US Army: *Adds 15 inch-long bayonet*

    • @moosemaimer
      @moosemaimer Рік тому +9

      Make it long enough and you don't even have to get out of the trench to stab people on the other side

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Рік тому +4

      ​@@moosemaimerAh, the M91/30 approach.

  • @edwardloomis887
    @edwardloomis887 Рік тому +48

    My battalion in West Berlin mid-1980s had four Winchester 12-gauge military shotguns intended for ammunition guards.They tended to never leave the Headquarters Company arms room. Having fallen in love with them after shooting one at Rose Range next the Wannsea, I asked to be issued one for alerts and exercises. They still used the M1917 bayonet. Loved the weapon, and its uniqueness sent a message. Had a faux terrorist meant to test my command post's security set off his bomb when he saw me charge with the weapon, killing himself, me and the door guard, but the CP continued to manage the battle.

    • @jamesstarkey2554
      @jamesstarkey2554 Рік тому +3

      The 728th MP BN companies (552, 557, 57, 188) in Korea in the mid 1990's still had dozens of these in the arms room which were carried by the Korean Contract security guards. I wish that I knew more about the history of the weapons as I was inventorying them back then as it would have been neat to see if any were WWI vintage. I wonder if they were ever sent back to Anniston Army depot, and if they would ever be available through the CMP

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Рік тому +5

      You write very well for a dead man.

    • @HessianLikeTheFabric
      @HessianLikeTheFabric Рік тому

      A "faux" terrorist that sets off a suicide attack? What's faux about that o.O

    • @edwardloomis887
      @edwardloomis887 Рік тому +3

      @HessianLikeTheFabric , it was part of the exercise play. It was a Soldier pretending to be a terrorist pretending to be a Soldier wearing the wrong headgear holding a briefcase bomb.

    • @HessianLikeTheFabric
      @HessianLikeTheFabric Рік тому +4

      @@edwardloomis887 Ah, my bad, I missed the exercise part, that ofc makes a lot more sense. Sorry for the misunderstanding

  • @csipawpaw7921
    @csipawpaw7921 Рік тому +156

    When I was a rookie cop we had shotguns capable of slam fire. We were taught that, when you shove the slide forward shove it at the target and you would hit the target! I was surprised how effective it was. We all were sad to see our slam fire shotgun get traded in on newer shotguns without slam fire capability. But the insurance companies and city attorneys insisted on it even though we never had a bad shooting from a slam fire!

    • @nucleargrizzly1776
      @nucleargrizzly1776 Рік тому +14

      Ah Ithaca shotguns. So much fun. So easy to do something stupid. 😁

    • @LexYeen
      @LexYeen Рік тому +9

      Just because you never had a problem doesn't mean you never would've.

    • @nucleargrizzly1776
      @nucleargrizzly1776 Рік тому +15

      @@LexYeen Decades ago I paid next to nothing for an Ithaca 37. Could never get *MY* timing right. Got too used to keeping my finger on the trigger. Figured that eventually I'd do something stupid.

    • @alltat
      @alltat Рік тому +14

      Better that they insist on it *before* a bystander dies than after.

    • @kyleheins
      @kyleheins Рік тому +19

      Yeah, the competence of many officers in the current generation has dropped so low that even with good training they still chronically do stupid things, getting themselves in trouble and others hurt. Having the slam fire is great for well trained and self-regulated people, we are just running dangerously low on said individuals.

  • @davidyetter5409
    @davidyetter5409 Рік тому +2

    My brother has a ww2 model. I have 6 model 97 Winchester in both 12 and 16 gauges. Not all are in working condition. But several are. Great all around weapons.

  • @mrwdpkr5851
    @mrwdpkr5851 Рік тому +5

    I've seen footage from the Vietnam War with the 97 in use . Love the Winnie !

  • @advert1489
    @advert1489 Рік тому +2

    The 1897 has to be the prettiest shotgun. It is definitely one of the best looking guns in general.

  • @ryanburns3921
    @ryanburns3921 Рік тому +5

    I've always wanted one just for the external hammer design. I don't care about the slamfire. The heat shield and bayonet lug would always be a welcome bonus.

  • @ethinwhite3454
    @ethinwhite3454 Рік тому +1

    This is the pride and joy of my uncles shotgun collection. He got his from my grandpa's dad.

  • @AllAboutSurvival
    @AllAboutSurvival Рік тому +10

    It's fascinating to learn about the Winchester 1897 Trench Gun's role in WW1 and how it evolved to suit various combat conditions. The versatility and adaptability of firearms during that era truly showcased American ingenuity in weaponry. Thanks for sharing this historical perspective on firearms in World War I

  • @herrgodfrey9563
    @herrgodfrey9563 10 місяців тому +1

    My brothers and I will be handed down an M1897 from my great grandfather, grandfather and eventually, my father. It was made in I believe 1916, if I remember correctly. It is a hunting '97, not the trench version, though. Still a really fun shotgun.

  • @kalashnikovdevil
    @kalashnikovdevil Рік тому +4

    I have a Norinco clone of the 1897 Trench, it's got some nice benefits, namely it's set up for modern shells out of the box, but you still get the raw joy of an 1897 without paying out a stupid amount for an actual historical piece, or finding an 1897 fowling gun and having it converted. Honestly words cannot describe how damn fun my Trench gun is. I love that damn thing.

    • @adrianotero7963
      @adrianotero7963 Рік тому +1

      I have one too......and you are right, it is lots of fun.......it's excactly like this one, but new.....have shot it quite a bit.....and like the original it is very reliable.....only downside for me is country of manufacturing.....

  • @bobhill3941
    @bobhill3941 Рік тому

    Thanks for the recommendation.
    You're right about that, myself and my family never went that route when purchasing firearms, but I've seen people who have.
    I was looking at that, and yes, the Type 81 is still classified as non restricted because it's closer to the SKS than an AK "varient", it's just expensive ($1,300 CDN)
    I'm sorry for your experience but from what people have told me, they've never had experiences like that at gun stores.
    In Canada, gun safety is part of your course to get your firearms licence which is legally required to purchase firearms, along with a three day waiting period for handguns and certain other guns (restricted)
    That was the first thing our instructor said in our possession and accusation course (PAL) always control the muzzle direction and never use your scope, use binoculars. We also have a specific hunter safety course that's required to get your license to hunt.

  • @G1llmanBlacklg00n
    @G1llmanBlacklg00n Рік тому +11

    I remember seeing an MP pulling guard duty with this shotgun at an on-post Bank at Fort Bragg in 1980. It was still a hell of a weapon then, and still is today.

  • @Chris_the_Dingo
    @Chris_the_Dingo Рік тому +1

    My ex father-in-law had his father's model 1897, commercial version of course. I still used it for duck hunting, back in the late 80s

  • @TheHylianBatman
    @TheHylianBatman Рік тому +3

    One of the finest shotguns ever made.

  • @chrishooge3442
    @chrishooge3442 Рік тому +2

    I came across a variant of the 1897 trench guns in a civilian DOD security guard arms room circa 2001. They even had the bayonets. Beautiful gun and it had been well maintained. If smart phones had existed I'd have taken a photo.

  • @lordgarion514
    @lordgarion514 Рік тому +9

    Shotguns might hold 5 rounds, and be slow to fire, but they scare the hell out of everyone on the other end of it.

    • @hardheadjarhead
      @hardheadjarhead 6 місяців тому

      They fire far faster than a bolt action even without using slam fire . Loading takes more time, of course.

  • @alaretse
    @alaretse Рік тому +1

    I was an MP in the early 70s. We are all kinds of shotguns in the armory. We even carried them on patrol in the car. My favorite was the 1897 which we still had. I liked it because the external hammer you could carry safely with a round in the chamber and hammer on half cock.

  • @burlatsdemontaigne6147
    @burlatsdemontaigne6147 Рік тому +7

    Surely the British antipathy towards using shotguns on the battlefield was more likely born of a reluctance to use a Gentleman's fowling piece on mere Germans.

  • @justinayers3589
    @justinayers3589 Рік тому +19

    Ive always wanted on of these since I first saw it in WaW 15 years ago. Its like a Faberge egg, just looks so aesthetic.

    • @rainman2222
      @rainman2222 Рік тому

      Honestly they look a little bit better when they have some wear on them. Just my opinion but I like when it looks like it just won two world wars

  • @mauricestevenson5740
    @mauricestevenson5740 Місяць тому

    I found out about the 1897 Trench Gun some years ago when my gunsmith had his out on the bench for routine maintenance. On first examination, I thought it a funky, clunky item until he told us that you could “fan it”. He had to explain what that meant - the concept of a pump-action being “fanned” took a certain amount of grasping. Coincidentally, soon after, one of the guys in the club pulled a Norinco 1897 out of his truck after the formal business of the day was finished. He asked if anyone wanted to try it out. Ha, ha, ha. I volunteered.
    We walked down the range a bit and I fed a few shells into the mag tube. I caught the eye of my friend who had been at the tutorial from our gunsmith. He nodded.
    I pointed the gun down range and fired, being careful not to release the trigger. I looked at my friend again. He nodded again. He also grinned.
    I emptied the magazine. It did not take long. I showed clear and turned around. A variety of expressions showed on the faces present, primarily surprise or disbelief. I handed the gun back to the owner (his expression was horror) and thanked him. I got the feeling that my friend and I were the only ones present that knew an 1897 Winchester could do that.
    @thegoldencaulk2742 is correct. Unforgettable is the right word.

  • @lunarpking
    @lunarpking Рік тому +26

    I have a Norinco short 1897 copy and I’ve always wanted to fit it with a heat shield, but every one for sale says they don’t fit the Norinco guns.
    Super fun shotgun, my go to out of the several I own. Despite being short the recoil isn’t bad due to the weight, but it isn’t even that heavy.

    • @dimas152mm
      @dimas152mm Рік тому +2

      p sure they'd fit anyway, it's just clamp-on
      just be sure the gun is long enough to accommodate the heat shield ig

    • @ComiCBoY000
      @ComiCBoY000 Рік тому +1

      I had the same issues with repro heat shields. If you find an original one they fit perfect.

    • @apodski
      @apodski Рік тому

      Easy enough to grind (mini flap wheel) or shim with brass shim stock.

    • @kutter_ttl6786
      @kutter_ttl6786 Рік тому +2

      I recall Norinco used to sell its 1897 in the military trench gun configuration a few years ago, but I haven't seen any lately. The quality has apparently dropped a bit with the more recent clones.

  • @TheRaven228
    @TheRaven228 10 місяців тому +1

    I love how Germany was like “ban this shit NOW” when they were using shit like flamethrowers and gas lmao😭

  • @thomasjefferson_
    @thomasjefferson_ Рік тому +1

    Forgotten weapons presents: the most well remembered weapon

  • @thenoneckpeoplerepresentat8074

    There’s still some Norinco clones around in Canada, they were reasonably priced too at around $350. Quality was decent and they could be slam fired like the original.

  • @mikekroll9573
    @mikekroll9573 Рік тому

    The interaction with the Army officer is 100% believable, especially the response given to him. I have had very similar conversations while in the service and currently in the private sector with Army officers…

  • @acethesupervillain348
    @acethesupervillain348 Рік тому +4

    Also from the Revolution to the US Civil War, Americans were loading their smoothbore muskets with buck-and-ball loads, so the idea of combat buckshot goes all the way back to the beginning for America.

  • @pmcKANE
    @pmcKANE Рік тому +2

    I cannot be alone in the belief that more guns should also have swords on them.

  • @wes11bravo
    @wes11bravo Рік тому +3

    Back in the early 80s, I had a classmate whose dad was a retired US Army Major who had a long barreled M1897 - a very cool piece. Though I do prefer the Riot/Trench version!

  • @CaptCook999
    @CaptCook999 Рік тому

    My father had an 1897 12 gauge takedown model. That was one fantastic shotgun!

  • @frenchfrey65
    @frenchfrey65 Рік тому +148

    a gun so legendary that a meme 100 years later was created where the Germans view it as a weapon of mass destruction, worse than mustard gas.

    • @hughgrection3052
      @hughgrection3052 Рік тому +3

      Yeah. Don't get me wrong, they're crazy badass weapons.
      IMO tho one has to consider the context of the era they was used tho. These are in no way better than a more reliable, stronger and more accurate rifle.
      But... this was when a single messenger pigeon being let loose by the enemy could spell disaster for your forces if it was able to escape. So they would hand out tons of shotguns to use more for the birds, but also kill at close range effectively when needed.
      The fact they had so many around made up for the fact they used buckshot instead of birdshot.
      If not for the bird aspect, they would have skipped these totally. Which is exactly what happened eventually for what should be obvious reasons.
      People tend to think they was used because of how effective they was vs Germans. That just isn't the case.
      Rifles did that better and was reloaded quicker too.
      But, I own a rare Model 12 Heavy duck and love it to death. It was sawed off to 18 inches and has the rare ability to fire 3 inch shells instead of just 2 3/4 shells.
      You'd think at least Ian would know they wasn't there for reasons most people assume and mention that.
      But, regardless they're awesome as hell guns. I love the flaming bomb too. The slamfire is alot more useful than he said also. It prevent a soldier who's amped on adrenaline from messing up the fire sequencing of not releasing then pulling the trigger in the right orders. So it made them much more effective.
      Great guns. A trench is on my bucket list for sure

    • @frenchfrey65
      @frenchfrey65 Рік тому +8

      @@hughgrection3052 and here I was just telling a joke

    • @mattbowden4996
      @mattbowden4996 Рік тому

      It's widely misunderstood today - the Germans didn't seriously think the protest was going to achieve anything but it was the latest stage in an ongoing tit-for-tat between the Entente and Central powers about who was the most barbaric. First the Brits complained about German "butcher blades" then the Germans complained about British "dum-dum bullets" then the Brits complained about gas so the Germans complained about mining and so on. No one expected it to make any difference on the battlefield - it was all propaganda meant to rile up the domestic audience.

    • @hughgrection3052
      @hughgrection3052 Рік тому +2

      @frenchfrey65 And here I was saying why they are legendary to the point of a meme.
      What a coinkdink.
      All the laughter and sheer humor must have affected my reasoning.
      By all means, proceed with the thing that is maximum humor and the merry making that you do so well, that I so rudely interrupted.
      My apolgies....😉

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Рік тому +6

      @@hughgrection3052The trench gun serves the same purpose as a submachine gun. Each pellet is ballistically equivalent to a 9mm pistol bullet.
      The US army never ordered or issued bird shot loads for them - only buckshot (in cardboard and later full brass cartridges (the brass cartridges arrived too late for WW1 but were used widely in WW2)).

  • @johngrant8020
    @johngrant8020 Рік тому +1

    Love this video I have the bayonet for 15 years and never knew what it fit

  • @LowellWong
    @LowellWong Рік тому +5

    C&Rsenal also did a in-depth look to this iconic shotgun with Mae shooting it and their thoughts about it. Check that episode out if you want to get into the history of it.

  • @pb68slab18
    @pb68slab18 Рік тому +1

    "Slam-fire" might not be prudent or more effective in a combat situation, but on the back 40, it certainly is FUN!

  • @jimoconnor4901
    @jimoconnor4901 Рік тому +6

    I was the unit armorer for the 410th MO Company at Ft. Hood, TX in 1976. I was signed for 170 of newer winchester shotguns. Amoung other cool things.

  • @micjisters
    @micjisters Рік тому +1

    that bayonet is the most outstanding blade i've ever seen!

  • @mtacoustic1
    @mtacoustic1 Рік тому +2

    I believe the 3-screw clamp was still not enough to resist movement under recoil, so the screw holes in the adapter were drilled for a slight interference fit with the barrel. The barrel then had three slight cross-wise 'troughs' cut into them to match the screws for a mechanical, as well as a friction, lock.

  • @swj719
    @swj719 Рік тому +10

    Now THIS is a home defense gun.
    Bad Guy: *stumbles around living room in the dark*
    Me: "FIX BAYONETS!" *clack-clack*

  • @brittakriep2938
    @brittakriep2938 Рік тому +1

    Mr. Mc Collum! Why didn' t tell you the full story? In time of German Federation (1815 - 1866) only few of South German states bought a rather small number of side by side percussion shotguns, Württemberg, as far as i know, 100 guns. In those days german policemen, especially the ,town payed' ones, usually carried only a saber. The state paied rural police ( Gendarmerie or Landjäger), basicly soldiers doing policework, as paramilitary force had when necessary access to military firearms. The noted shotguns had been handed to policemen when they had to escort prisoners to annother prison, when fighting poachery etc.. In 1866 German Federation ended, Austria, Luxemburg and Liechtenstein became Independent countries, with own armed forces history.
    In Imperial Germany ( 1871 - 1918) shotguns had been nowhere in Germany service weapons, may be in very early years of german colonies, when they had been private owned territories of merchants, members of their Private Security Forces had shotguns.
    Then from 19th century, long into 20th century in Germany/Austria Wildwest novels had been known and popular, but an indigenious genre of adventure novels was popular: Novels in which Forrest Service officials ( Förster), sometimes also lawfull licenced huntsmen, fought mostly poachers or smugglers, sometimes other criminals. The Heroes of this novels are armed with their hunting rifle ( and Hirschfänger knife), shotguns, when appearing, had been the weapons of criminals in popular literature.
    Now, is it astonishing, that German soldiers, don't knowing shotguns as military or civilian service weapons, but knowing shotguns from novels as criminals weapons didn' t saw US soldiers with shotguns as honourable enemies?
    Even today use of shotguns in Germany is rare, SWAT Teams of Police and few soldiers use them to destroy doors etc., but firing at persons is strictly forbidden. And shotgun use is carefull watched by journalists and political left circles.

  • @SDeezy11
    @SDeezy11 Рік тому +3

    We had one come through the store I worked at. It had the US flaming bomb on the receiver. But one of the previous owners had ground off the bayonet lug and removed the head shield

  • @dash7828
    @dash7828 Рік тому +3

    *germans complain about shotguns*
    *the French guy who got toasted by a flame thrower and the British guy who got caught in a gas cloud* - “bruh” 💀

  • @gravecrawlerr
    @gravecrawlerr 2 місяці тому +1

    First gun that required a nerf

  • @Daniel-vl8mx
    @Daniel-vl8mx Рік тому +6

    There were probably a few reasons why other forces didn't field shotguns in WWI. One was concern that they didn't meet the laws of war. There was an Australian officer on Gallipoli in 1915, a Boer War veteran named Stephen Midgely DSO, who used a sawn-off double on trench raids:
    " The “Old Bird” is a holy terror in these raids. He’s only an exceptionally small chap and no youth either, but he is about the most murderous old devil in the regiment. He leads these raids with a hell of a yell as he jumps down into the trench, blazing to the right and left with a sawn-off shotgun. An ordinary service revolver is no good for him.”
    At least one of his fellow officers also used the shotgun for the same purpose, before Midgely was ordered to put it away by the brass, on the basis apparently that it wasn't quite the thing. I think the Turks may also have had something to say about it.
    Given that trenches were also cleared with trench mortars and jam-tin bombs (improvised grenades) in the same campaign it hardly seems to make sense.

    • @dananderson6697
      @dananderson6697 10 місяців тому

      "Wasn't quite the thing" sounds more than a little bit of an "officers are all of the opinion that war ought to be a gentlemanly sport" thing than anything else. Anybody who had to actually jump into a trench would not have hesitated to take one of these over a service revolver every single time, 10 out of 10, no exceptions.

    • @colonelfustercluck486
      @colonelfustercluck486 4 місяці тому

      @@dananderson6697 "it's just not cricket you know"

    • @dananderson6697
      @dananderson6697 4 місяці тому

      @@colonelfustercluck486 Exactly. "Bad form, wot?"

  • @richardrose9943
    @richardrose9943 10 місяців тому +1

    I can’t think of a better home defense gun with the exception of needing a shorter bayonet

  • @johntriplett4470
    @johntriplett4470 Рік тому +8

    One of the most brutally tacticool weapons ever contrived.

  • @tensortab8896
    @tensortab8896 Рік тому +2

    We were still using Winchester pump shotguns in the Army in the 1980s.

  • @bigchimptactical
    @bigchimptactical Рік тому +5

    I am interested in these shotguns, however this is merely coincidental 😂
    You could make a video about the footwear of WW1 and I'd watch it. And running into you at SHOT was still one of the highlights of my year. Inspirational, entertaining, and very informative. Thank you for doing this for all this time. I wish you many more years of success !

  • @Balevolt
    @Balevolt Рік тому +1

    That is a hell of a bayonet

  • @El-Burrito
    @El-Burrito Рік тому +6

    This gun is iconic and a looker.

  • @PsychopathicV2
    @PsychopathicV2 Рік тому

    I personally just bought an 1897 Tench gun built in 1907. It has a 28” barrel. No clue about it’s history but for 116 years old it’s in pretty good shape.

  • @jjb2244
    @jjb2244 Рік тому +6

    One of my favorite firearms of all time

  • @dougler500
    @dougler500 Рік тому +1

    AWESOME detailed history on the weapons use and introduction into the military. Very well done!

  • @enricopaolocoronado2511
    @enricopaolocoronado2511 Рік тому +12

    Look, if some Yankee came in charging over the wire and blasting Fritz and Hans with a shotgun before gutting me with his bayonet, I'd be one Sour Kraut, too.

  • @sslocke
    @sslocke Рік тому +1

    Best looking "war crime" ever used

  • @nunyabidniz2868
    @nunyabidniz2868 Рік тому +8

    General John "Black Jack" Pershing earned that sobriquet from when he was in command of a troop of 10th Cavalry "Buffalo soldiers," and insisted that his men be treated with the respect due any US military man, despite the rampant racism of the times in which he lived. Needless to say, this earned him loyalty from the soldiers under his command. But make no mistake, the epithet "Black Jack" was intended as an insult by those who originally coined it & tried to use it against him. Seems like they failed. As commander of the AEF, it was also ultimately his decision which led to the US' African-American soldiers serving on the battle lines under French command during WW1, where they would receive better treatment and more respect than under the less-enlightened American command structure.

    • @joeblow8379
      @joeblow8379 Рік тому +1

      The treatment of African-American soldiers is overplayed by the media. They were treated just fine and were even allowed to fly state of the art aircraft in WWII.

  • @slthbob
    @slthbob Рік тому

    1991 3rd Ranger Battalion we had bayonets on pump action shotguns in the "Special Weapons" arms room beside mp5ks... you would be amazed at the adjustments to attention span that a fixed bayonet does to the fauna.

  • @Zer0fuks
    @Zer0fuks Рік тому +8

    Imagine if someone made a cleaver bayonet attachment and essentially turn the shotgun into a battle-axe.

    • @SamlSchulze1104
      @SamlSchulze1104 Рік тому +2

      Imagine someone getting dumber from having just read that.

    • @drewmetz389
      @drewmetz389 8 місяців тому

      Shotgun is already a battle axe dummy. Turn a tree into pulp quicker than an ace in Paul Bunyans hands

  • @jeromethiel4323
    @jeromethiel4323 Рік тому +2

    Pershing would have crapped his pants if he had seen the AA-12. ^-^

  • @ThePerks2010
    @ThePerks2010 Рік тому +4

    Honestly couldn't think of anything worse than walking round a trench corner to be greeted with that thing, I'm not surprised the Germans complained haha

  • @brianjones7660
    @brianjones7660 6 місяців тому +1

    my son Ethan got one of these, fully functional, off a friend needing money, for the closeout price of $250... 2 years ago.
    Mine was built in 1907, runs like a charm....despite the age , I think Ill keep it!
    The shotgun I mean, not my son...he is a newer model....🤭

  • @gw5436
    @gw5436 Рік тому +13

    The lack of interest by British, French and Australians to the shotgun included the big issue of the incessant rain and mud, which ruined the paper cartridges and made them require so much care to keep dry. I read this in an Australian soldiers memoirs of the trenches in France and his experiences there. Nobody ever mention this.

    • @lightly_salted_iro
      @lightly_salted_iro Рік тому +5

      Yanks had brass shells available from memory.
      European countries likely didn't want to pay the extra.

    • @hailexiao2770
      @hailexiao2770 Рік тому

      ​@@lightly_salted_iroToo bad lacquered mild steel didn't exist back then. It would have been the perfect compromise between cost and durability.

    • @dustinbrueggemann1875
      @dustinbrueggemann1875 Рік тому +1

      @@hailexiao2770 WWI was heavily related to industrialized warfare even becoming possible. Such material innovations only came about *because* of those performance issues being discovered in the field.

  • @davefellhoelter1343
    @davefellhoelter1343 Рік тому

    as a kid who Grew up and Learned to Handle my first Shot Gun with a "97", 97! used for Generations on the family farm, and a Black Powder shooter from stoners, cappers, and revolvers. "I JUST Don't get It" why the Europeans never thought better of these?
    a 97 Is STILL MY FAVORITE 12ga to Run! They just feel Good in the hands, like a 1911. "I NEVER" bothered with the 97 "Slam Fire" just as fast with my 870. Thanks JMB and RIP!
    Europeans Used Buck n Ball! in their smooth bores, they had the use and knew? I suspect it was Political. but Gas was OK?
    for what it's worth? CQB? 25 yrds or less, I'm thinking BB's Improved! or Modified? Cylinders' and Hamburger, I have hit a few larger birds up close a little to well in life.

  • @judsongaiden9878
    @judsongaiden9878 Рік тому +27

    What I don't understand is why no one ever thought - because it has an exposed hammer - to give it a stock with a grip with a revolver-like contour to it (maybe with a backstrap to protect the shooting hand while cycling the action).

    • @andrewamann2821
      @andrewamann2821 Рік тому +15

      As an owner of an old-timey thumbskinner, that is my go-to longarm for home defense, it makes you intensely aware of keeping your hands where they belong during drills.

    • @Mossy500A
      @Mossy500A Рік тому +3

      Later models had improved stocks.

    • @BassicBear
      @BassicBear Рік тому +4

      It's really not a big deal once you're used to it. I've hurt myself more on the lifter sticking out the bottom when the action is opened than with the bolt.

    • @hailexiao2770
      @hailexiao2770 Рік тому

      It would have to be a two piece stock, since finding a single piece of hardwood with the right grain for a one piece of that shape would be insanely difficult.