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John Browning

John Moses Browning

Personal Info
Birth January 21, 1855, Ogden, Utah
Death November 26, 1926, Liége
Age 71
Personal Wealth unknown
Company Info
Name Browning Arms Company
Foundation 1927, Utah
Fate 1977, acquired as a subsidiary by Fabrique Nationale de Herstal (FN)
Company Value unknown
Headquarters Flag of the United States Mountain Green, Utah
Notable Weapons
Pistols M1911 pistol
Automatic rifles Browning Automatic Rifle
Shotguns Browning Auto-5
Machine Guns M2 Browning

John Moses Browning (January 21[1] or January 23,[2] 1855 – November 26, 1926), born in Ogden, Utah, was an American firearms designer who developed many varieties of firearms, cartridges, and gun mechanisms, many of which are still in use around the world. He is the most important figure in the development of modern automatic and semi-automatic firearms and is credited with 128 gun patents—his first was granted October 7, 1879.

Browning influenced nearly all categories of firearms design. He invented or made significant improvements to single-shot rifles, lever action rifles, and slide action firearms. His most significant contributions were in the area of autoloading firearms. He developed the autoloading pistol by inventing the slide design found on nearly every modern automatic handgun. He also developed the first gas-operated machine gun, the Colt-Browning Model 1895—a system that would surpass recoil operation in popularity. Other successful designs include the M1911 pistol, the Browning .50 caliber machine gun, the Browning Automatic Rifle, and a ground-breaking semi-automatic shotgun, the Browning Auto-5.

Contents

History

Browning belonged to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and served a two-year mission in Georgia beginning on March 28, 1887. His father Jonathan Browning, who was among the thousands of Mormon pioneers in the mass exodus from Nauvoo, Illinois to Utah, had established a gunsmith shop in Ogden in 1852. John Moses worked in his father's shop and later developed his first rifle, a single-shot falling-block design, in that capacity. He founded his own manufacturing operation and began to produce this firearm.

Production examples of the Browning single-shot caught the attention of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company who dispatched a representative to evaluate the competition. Winchester bought the design and moved production to their Connecticut factory. Useful Reference Encyclopedia 1883, Browning worked in partnership with Winchester and designed a series of rifles and shotguns, most notably the Winchester Model 1887 and Model 1897 shotguns, the falling block single shot Model 1885, and the lever-action Model 1886, Model 1892, Model 1894 and Model 1895 rifles, most of which are still in production today in some form; over seven million Model 1894 have been produced, more than any other centerfire sporting rifle in history.[3]

Perhaps the most infamous singular Browning-designed firearm was a FN Model 1910 handgun, serial number 19074.[4] In 1914, Gavrilo Princip used the .380 ACP pistol to assassinate Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Sophie. This event arguably sparked World War I. The pistol was rediscovered in 2004.[5]

A Winchester Rifle, circa 1894.

On November 26, 1926, while working on a self-loading pistol design for FN in Liège, he died of heart failure in the office of his son Val A. Browning. The 9 mm self-loading pistol he was working on when he died was eventually completed in 1935, by Belgian designer Dieudonne Saive. Released as the Fabrique Nationale GP35, it was more popularly known as the Browning Hi-Power. The Superposed shotgun was his last firearm design, marketed originally with twin triggers. A single trigger modification was later completed by his son, Val.

Throughout his life, Browning designed weapons for his own company, Winchester, Colt, Remington, Savage, and Fabrique Nationale of Belgium. In 1977, FN acquired the Browning Arms Company which had been established in 1927, the year after Browning's death.

Products

Several of his designs are still in production today. Some of his most notable designs include:

Firearms

Mid-1945 produced M1911A1 U.S. Army Colt.
  • M1895 Colt-Browning machine gun
  • FN Browning M1899/M1900
  • Colt Model 1900
  • Colt Model 1902
  • Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer (.38 ACP)
  • Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless (.32 ACP)
  • Colt Model 1905
  • Remington Model 8 (1906), a long recoil semi-automatic rifle
  • Colt Model 1908 Vest Pocket (.25 ACP)
  • Colt Model 1908 Pocket Hammerless (.380 ACP)
  • FN Model 1910
  • U.S. Model 1911 pistol
  • Winchester Model 1885 falling block single shot rifle
  • Winchester Model 1886 lever-action repeating rifle
  • Winchester Model 1887 lever-action repeating shotgun
  • Winchester Model 1890 slide-action repeating rifle (.22)
  • Winchester Model 1892 lever-action repeating rifle
  • Winchester Model 1894 lever-action repeating rifle
  • Winchester Model 1895 lever-action repeating rifle
  • Winchester Model 1897 pump-action repeating shotgun
  • Browning Auto-5 long recoil semi-automatic shotgun
  • U.S. Model 1917 water-cooled machine gun
  • Model 1919 air-cooled machine gun
  • Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) of 1917
  • Browning M2 .50-caliber heavy machine gun of 1921
  • Remington Model 8 semi-auto rifle
  • Remington Model 24 semi-auto rifle (.22) Also produced by Browning Firearms and several others
  • The Browning Hi-Power, the last pistol that John Browning developed
  • The Browning Superposed over/under shotgun was designed by John Browning in 1922 and entered production in 1931

Cartridges

In addition, the cartridges he developed are still some of the most popular in the world. They include:

  • .25 ACP
  • .32 ACP
  • .38 ACP
  • 9mm Browning Long
  • .380 ACP
  • .45 ACP
  • .50 BMG

Military weapons

The Colt 1911, Browning 1917/19, and the BAR saw action in World War I, World War II and the Korean War, with the 1911 going on to serve as the U.S.'s standard military side arm until 1986; a variant is still used by special operations units of the United States Marine Corps and the design remains very popular amongst civilian shooters. The Browning Hi-Power would have a similarly lengthy period of service outside the United States, and remains the standard sidearm of the United Kingdom's, Australian and Canadian armed forces. The M2 heavy machine gun is still in widespread use throughout the world.

Selected patents

Related

  • John Moses Browning House

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica online, "John Moses Browning".
  2. ^ Pelley, Doug (2004-07). "Pictures of Headstones: John M. Browning". http://www.dapcom.com/Temples/Headstones/browning.htm. Retrieved 2007-01-23. 
  3. ^ Harold A. Murtz, ed. Gun Digest Treasury (DBI Books, 1994), p. 190.
  4. ^ Belfield, Richard. The Assassination Business: A History of State-Sponsored Murder, Carroll & Graf Publishers: New York. ISBN 0786713437. p. 237.
  5. ^ Connolly, Kate (21 June 2004). "Found: the gun that shook the world". The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/austria/1465206/Found-the-gun-that-shook-the-world.html. Retrieved 2 April 2009. 
  • Browning, John, and Curt Gentry. John M. Browning, American Gunmaker. New York: Doubleday, 1964. OCLC 1329440

External links