Tag Archives: lewis gun

The Belgian Rattlesnake: Curious case of the iconic Lewis Gun

U.S. Army Lt. Col. Isaac Newton Lewis took a failed design and ran with it, producing one of the best light machine guns the world saw in the first half of the 20th Century.

The Buffalo Arms Company or Buffalo, New York in 1910 was high and dry. They owned a series of patents to rather forward-thinking gun designs, to include a 37mm auto cannon and a huge tripod-mounted, gas-operated, water-cooled machine gun in .30-40 Krag, both of which were produced by one Samuel MacLean. Unable to get these off the drawing board and into production, BAC approached Lewis and asked him to moonlight.

At the time Lewis was the director of the U.S. Army Coastal Artillery School at Fort Monroe and known as something of an inventor and accomplished engineer in his own right, having designed the Depression Position Finder– the Army’s fire control device to aim artillery over distance, as well as electric lighting systems, modern electric windmill generators, and chart plotting systems.

The gun he came up with, while based on MacLean’s original patents, was altogether different.

Fully Transferrable Class III BSA Lewis Mark II Medium Machine Gun, (sold at auction in 2014 for $11k)

Fully Transferrable Class III BSA Lewis Mark II Medium Machine Gun, (sold at auction in 2014 for $11k)

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

Well used Lewis gun

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61-65-A MACHINE GUN CAL 30, US, LEWIS
Accession: 61-65-A
Machine Gun, Cal 30, US, Lewis, Relic (note cooling jacket, magazine pan and butt-stock gone)
Machine gun is from the USS Peary DD-226. The Peary was a Clemson-class Destroyer sunk on the 19th of February 1942 after a Japanese air attack. Peary lost 80 men in the attack and the ship is now located in Darwin Bay Australia.

Photo from the Collection of Curator Branch, Naval History and Heritage Command

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