Historical Guns

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Ben Baker: The Real-World "Q"

Ben Baker: The Real-World “Q”

Ian Fleming conjured his fictional MI6 agent 007 based upon his personal experiences as a spy during WW2. The name James Bond was pirated from that of an obscure ornithologist of the day. Fleming wanted his secret agent to have a name that was both pedestrian and unremarkable.

Major Josef “Sepp” Gangl: The Wehrmacht Hero Who Died Fighting for the Allies

Major Josef “Sepp” Gangl: The Wehrmacht Hero Who Died Fighting for the Allies

Young ideologically naive men always make the best soldiers. WW2 stole life on an unprecedented scale. Major Gangl’s heroic sacrifice was swallowed up in the carnage.

Heinrich “Hein” Severloh: The Penitent Butcher of Omaha Beach

Heinrich “Hein” Severloh: The Penitent Butcher of Omaha Beach

Heinrich “Hein” Severloh should have been a farmer. Born on June 23, 1923, in the town of Metzingen in Northern Germany, Heinrich was a man of the earth. However, in the Summer of 1941 his country called. Conscripted into the Wehrmacht, Severloh was trained as a dispatch rider and assigned to the 3d Battery

Ping! What Not To Do With Your M1 Garand

Ping! What Not To Do With Your M1 Garand

Sometimes I like to do dumb things with firearms.  Dumb as in use it in the ways they were never intended to be used. One day while bored earlier this year I decided it was time to bring the Garand back to life.

Montgomery Scott Goes to War: LT Jimmy Doohan on D-Day

Montgomery Scott Goes to War: LT Jimmy Doohan on D-Day

Over the years Doohan played a wide range of roles on screens both large and small. However, the one part for which he is best remembered is that of Montgomery Scott, the chief engineer on Star Trek’s starship Enterprise.

CSM Stanley Hollis: Humble Hero of D-Day

CSM Stanley Hollis: Humble Hero of D-Day

Of the 83,115 British troops who landed as part of Operation Overlord only one man earned the Victoria Cross. Abbreviated VC, the Victoria Cross is England’s highest award for valor in the face of the enemy. It is the British equivalent of our own Medal of Honor, and it is not easily acquired.

MG Maurice Rose: The Division Point

MG Maurice Rose: The Division Point

Maurice Rose was born in 1899 in Middletown, Connecticut, the son of Samuel and Katherin Rose. The son and grandson of rabbis from Poland, MG Rose was ultimately the highest-ranking Jewish officer in the United States Army. From the very beginning, Maurice Rose was a warrior.

The Curious Origins of the Ghillie Suit

The Curious Origins of the Ghillie Suit

Though they have really changed very little over the past century, the ghillie suit remains an integral part of the modern sniper’s kit. Wherever men institutionally kill each other there will be precision marksmen decked out in fluffy earth tones creeping about in the brush visiting death upon their enemies. Born in South Africa in the late 19th century, the ghillie suit remains a timeless sniper tool even today.

The Biscari Massacre: The Winners Write the History

The Biscari Massacre: The Winners Write the History

The winners write the history, and war is bad. Normal men forced into such abnormal circumstances are frequently driven to do things that seem unnatural from the comfort of our living rooms. The very act of combat is the most repugnant of human pursuits.

William J. "Wild Bill" Donovan: America's Alpha Spy

William J. “Wild Bill” Donovan: America’s Alpha Spy

Wild Bill Donovan’s statue graces the lobby of the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, today. In 2011 Vanity Fair writer Evan Douglas described Donovan’s exploits as “a brave, noble, headlong, gleeful, sometimes outrageous pursuit of action and skullduggery.” Wild Bill Donovan was the real freaking deal.