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- MAUSER BROOMHANDLE
-
- Officially known as the
- Mauser Military Model of 1896 -
- the first practical semi-auto
- pistol to be mass-produced -
- this peculiar-looking gun is
- instantly recognizable by the
- "broomhandle" appearance of its
- grips. Its "first generation"
- status is immediately apparent
- to the student of modern small
- arms: the magazine rests forward
- of the trigger guard rather than
- within the grip frame, and it is
- of the non-detachable box
- variety, making quick reloading
- more of a challenge (10-round
- stripper clips were fed into the
- magazine from above). A more
- careful inspection would show a
- preponderance of machined steel
- parts, as opposed to the later
- prevalence of steel stampings
- (and, more recently, nylon
- composites and plastics. See:
- GLOCK.).
-
- While no front line military
- force adopted the Mauser as its
- official sidearm, its most
- famous exploit occurred during
- the Boer War when it was wielded
- unofficially by Winston
- Churchill. The young leftenant
- bought an M-1896 on his own
- initiative and put it through
- its paces at Omdurmann, where he
- blasted his way out of a Boer
- ambush, escaping unscathed.
-
- The Mauser often came
- equipped with a detachable
- wooden shoulder stock and was
- eventually produced in selective
- fire/removable magazine
- versions. One could argue that,
- in this configuration, the
- Mauser was the first successful
- machine pistol.
-
- The 7.63mm (.30 caliber)
- bottlenecked cartridge
- originally developed for this
- gun achieved a far wider
- acceptance than the piece
- itself, particularly in Soviet
- Russia.
-