The History of Browning Firearms: A Complete Chronicle of the Greatest Gunsmith of All Time
By David Miller
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About this ebook
John M. Browning was born in Ogden, Utah, in 1855, into a world of gunsmithing. His father was a gunsmith who was already well known for a number of innovations in the field. As a young boy, John spent hours in his father's shop and allegedly knew the name of every part of a gun before he could read. It's hardly surprising that at age twenty-three, he was filing his first patent for the "J. M. Browning Single-Shot Rifle."
Browning inherited his father’s gun making shop, and with funds of less than a thousand dollars, developed it into a highly successful business that developed several iconic firearms including the Colt Peacemaker. Browning also cooperated with Winchester to develop a whole range of small arms including semi-automatic pistols, single-shot rifles, repeater rifles, and machine guns. His enthusiasm and creativity have led many to believe he is the greatest firearm designer of all time.
This fascinating book describes the Browning history, and in addition to covering the full range of inventions and designs, also shows various gun-making artifacts, copies of designers' drawings, and interesting photographs of the weapons in the hands of users.
The History of Browning Firearms makes a perfect addition to the libraries of Wild West buffs and firearms enthusiasts.
David Miller
David A. Miller is the vice president of Slingshot Group Coaching where he serves as lead trainer utilizing the IMPROVleadership coaching strategy with ministry leaders around the country. He has served as a pastor, speaker, teacher, and coach in diverse contexts, from thriving, multi-site churches to parachurch ministries.
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The History of Browning Firearms - David Miller
Introduction
The famous ‘Four B’s’ – G. L. Becker, John M. Browning, A. P. Bigelow and Matthew S. Browning. During the 1890’s these four Ogdenites were Utah’s premier live-bird team. Later they made national history at the traps as a squad of four.
JOHN MOSES BROWNING (1855-1926) is widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest firearms designers of all time; indeed, many would describe him as the greatest. His father, Jonathan Browning (1805-1879) was a gunsmith and designed several unusual rifles, but was simply not in the same league as his son, whose output included 128 patents and at least 80 separate designs.
Browning’s Gun Store in Ogden, Utah.
John and his brothers lived in the tiny frontier town of Ogden, Utah which was Old West
country and linked to the Eastern states by long and tenuous roads and trails, and from 1869 by the railroad. Despite such relative isolation and leaving school at fifteen after a typical rural education, John became a very respected businessman, first on a national scale, dealing with such well-established companies as Colt, Remington, Stevens and Winchester, and later on the international stage, regularly traveling to Europe to visit his closest business partner, Fabrique Nationale of Liége, Belgium. He also became closely involved with the United States government and with the army and navy, whose officers treated him with the greatest respect.
Browning’s designs covered the whole range of small arms, from semi-automatic pistols, through single-shot rifles and many different types of repeater rifles to machine guns. His brain was constantly active and he conducted a never-ending search for perfection. One of his greatest assets was that he was a highly enthusiastic shot and practiced his skills not only on ranges and in competitions, but also in the hills, fields and forests around Ogden, where he was able to loose off thousands of rounds from each weapon, detecting and analysing shortcomings and devising remedies which could then be implemented immediately in the workshop.
In writing about the Browning story, it is important to stress that the workshop in Ogden was not a firearms production facility. The shop sold and repaired hardware, such as farming implements and tools, and the firearms business was confined to making and refining John’s prototypes, and to selling and repairing firearms which had been produced elsewhere. Apart from weapons designed by the father, Jonathan Browning, and, as will be explained, the first 600 of John’s Single-Shot Rifles, only prototypes of Browning weapons were made there. When John sold his designs to other companies, he also gave up the right to manufacture them.
John Browning’s designs were made under license by both U.S. and foreign firearms companies, but there have also been many clones
which are exact copies of Browning weapons, although all too often made to far less rigorous engineering standards.
John Moses Browning collapsed and died in his office at the Fabrique Nationale factory in Liége, Belgium, in 1926. He was surrounded by many of his family and by workers whom he respected, in a factory whose fortunes he had done so much to secure. It was a fitting end to the life of a truly great man.
Salt Lake City, Utah in the 1850s was still the Old West
when John M. Browning was growing up.
CHAPTER ONE
John Moses Browning – An American Hero
THE BROWNING FAMILY arrived in Virginia in the 1620s and remained there for well over one hundred years. John Moses Browning’s grandfather, Edmund Browning, was born there in 1761, but in his twenties he married and he and his bride then joined the trek westwards, settling in Brushy Fork, Tennessee, where his wife gave birth to seven children. One of those children, Jonathan, was born in October 1805, but unlike his father, his interest was in blacksmithing and tanning rather than farming. Jonathan found his first work in a local smithy and then, at age 19, he went to Nashville, Tennessee, to work for a gunsmith in order to learn the highly specialized art of making and truing barrels, a vital skill in a society where virtually every family had at least one gun and used them to shoot for the pot or for self-defense.
Jonathan Browning returned to Brushy Fork, where he established his own business and married, but the work fell away as their neighbors answered the siren call of the West. In 1833 Jonathan and his family joined them, heading westwards and eventually finding a new home in Quincy, Illinois on the banks of the Mississippi.
In 1842 Jonathan made a fundamental change to his and his family’s way of life, by converting to the Mormon religion, whereupon they moved to Nauvoo, Illinois where he once again set up a new gunmaking business. Jonathan repeatedly volunteered to join his co-religionists in their march to the West but his church authorities told him that he was needed in Nauvoo and to continue to make arms. His persistence finally triumphed, however, and in 1852 he moved with his family to Ogden in Utah, some 30 miles from Salt Lake City. There he took a second wife and then a third, having an eventual total of 22 children, the last of whom was born when he was 71 years old. Jonathan was a respected member of the community, becoming a local councilor and judge, but always retaining his gunsmithing business, although he never made a new gun after the move to Utah, concentrating instead on repair work. In his earlier years he designed a repeating rifle using a horizontally sliding, four-round magazine, which worked well, but it was designed for use with percussion caps and had the ill luck to appear just as metallic cartridges appeared. Jonathan died in 1879 at the age of 74.
Jonathan Browning
John Moses Browning
John Moses Browning was the eldest of two sons of Jonathan Browning’s second wife and was born in Ogden, Utah, on January 23, 1855. By the age of six he was regularly helping his father in the workshop and a year later he was also working in the tannery. He made his first gun at the age of ten, creating a rifle to his own design from components he found among his father’s piles of scrap, and which he then used to shoot prairie chicken for the family table. He also repaired farm machinery, and, when driven by necessity, made moccasins and boots. When just past his thirteenth birthday he was given a broken but high-quality shotgun by one of his father’s customers and his first action was to disassemble it down to the smallest possible component. He analyzed every part, repaired or replaced those that were damaged and ended up with a thoroughly usable gun, of far higher quality than he would have been able to afford at that stage in his life.
The town of Ogden was an isolated Western outpost – a small Mormon community in outback Utah. The first major change came when the trans-continental railroad was completed in 1869, with the famous Golden Spike
episode actually taking place only 50 miles away. The second, even more crucial change came in January 1870 when the Utah Central Railroad gave Ogden a direct link to Salt Lake City and thus to the outside world.
John attended the local school which was a typical Western school with one teacher supervising a number of classes in one large room. John certainly learned to read and write and do arithmetic, but he had probably learned little more than that, and when the teacher told him that he had nothing more to pass on to his pupil they both realized that it was time for John to leave.
John’s early days in the workshop were, not surprisingly, devoted to perfecting his skills, and he worked hard at repairing guns, although his enquiring mind and detailed examination of the various mechanisms that came his way led him to devise methods of improving them. Nevertheless, he did not move on into the realm of real invention until 1878, when, at 23, he finally got down to designing a totally new gun, which was destined to become the famous Single-Shot. As would happen repeatedly over the coming years, he prepared the whole concept, both in detail and in its totality, in his mind, before preparing drawings and then starting work on the prototype, the whole process taking him about eleven months. This was an incredible achievement, firstly because it was his very first design and secondly because he achieved in just under a year what it takes most people about five to complete.
Despite living in a remote Western town and his limited knowledge of the ways of the world, John knew that he had to protect his work with a patent, but had no idea how to go about it. Undeterred, he turned to a mail-order company in the East whose goods he sold in the shop and they, very courteously, passed his query to a patent attorney. The latter treated the application with the seriousness it deserved, translated the inventor’s flowing prose into the correct dry legal terminology and duly obtained U.S. Patent Number 220,271 of 1879, the first of many which would be granted to the Western inventor.
In 1852 Jonathan Browning and his family moved west along the Mormon trail.
Nauvoo, Illinois
ORIGINALLY NAMED COMMERCE, the Mormons renamed it Nauvoo — meaning a beautiful place of rest in Hebrew. The central building, the Temple, whose cornerstone was laid on April 6, 1841, formed the hub of the community. Within 5 years the town had been established but pressure from the Mormon’s neighbors forced them to undertake the vigil West in 1846 to find new freedom from persecution. Jonathan Browning was keen to make the trip West but Mormon leaders recognizing the need for maintaining arms for defense kept him back to repair the community’s weapons. Observers who visited the town after it had been deserted reported a place with newly built houses surrounded by well tended gardens.
The town has now been rebuilt and is an historic American Site.
The Browning workshop in reconstructed Nauvoo. Jonathan set up shop here in 1842 after converting to the Mormon religion.