holding a Model 1919 Thompson
Development Brigadier General John T. Thompson, who spent most of his career in the ordnance department of the
U.S. Army, was the original inventor and developer of the Thompson submachine gun. He envisioned it as a fully
automatic rifle intended to replace the
bolt-action service rifles then in use (such as the American
M1903 Springfield). 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. 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. 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 then 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. 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".
Early use holding an M1928 Thompson during the
Banana Wars The first Thompson entered production as the Model of 1921. 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 ) The major initial complaints concerning the Thompson were its cumbersome weight, its inaccuracy at ranges over , and its lack of penetrating power using the .45 ACP cartridge. The Thompson was first used in combat in 13 June 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. Some of the first batches of Thompsons were bought (in America) by agents of the
Irish Republican Army (notably the Irish gunman
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. 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 (1919–1921). After a ceasefire called by the British in July 1921, the Irish Republican Army imported more units, which were used in the subsequent
Irish Civil War (1922–1923). The Thompson was not found to be very effective in Ireland, having only caused serious casualties in 32 percent of the incidents in which it was used. The Thompson has been referred to by one researcher as the "gun that made the
twenties roar". Around 200 Model 1921 Thompsons were sold in 1926 to the
United States Postal Inspection Service so they could protect the mail from a spate of robberies. These weapons were loaned to the United States Marine Corps which was, at that time, tasked with guarding mail shipments; this prompted the US Navy to formally test the Thompson. The Navy requested a reduction in the rate of fire. Auto-Ordnance complied, modifying the weapons by adding a substantial amount of mass to the actuator. The Navy subsequently ordered 500 guns, designated the Model of 1928. The new cost was listed as $225 per weapon (), with ammunition sold at $5 per 50-round drum and $3 per 20-round magazine.
World War II 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. Two alternatives to the "L" 50-round drum and "XX" 20-round box magazines were tested 6 December 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. (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.
Combat use fires on a Japanese position using an M1 Thompson submachine gun during an
advance on Okinawa in May 1945. 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. 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 (machine pistol, 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. 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, 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. 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. 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.) 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. 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 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.
After World War II Thompson submachine guns were used by both sides during the
1948 Arab-Israeli war. Following the war, Thompsons were issued to members of Israel's elite
Unit 101, upon the formation of that unit in 1953. 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. The Thompson also found service with the
KNIL and the
Netherlands Marine Corps during their
attempt to retake their former colony of Indonesia. The gun was used by Indonesian infiltrators during the 1965
Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation. In the First Indochina War, Viet Minh use this SMG by captured from French and Bao Dai army, also Viet Minh use the Chinese copy the Thompson (Type 36) 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. 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. 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. 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. During
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." 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. ==Collector interest==