History of M1 Carbine

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
96,733
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Jun 3, 2008

David Marshal Williams was born in Cumberland County, North Carolina eldest of seven children. As a young boy, he worked on his family's farm. He dropped out of school after eighth grade and began work in a blacksmith shop, enjoyed a short stint in Navy, but was discharged because he was underage. After returning from the Navy, he spent a semester at Blackstone Military Academy before being expelled.

In 1918, he married Margaret Cooke and they later had one child, David Marshall, Jr. Williams worked for Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, but on the side he had an illegal distillery near Godwin, North Carolina. During a raid on this still on July 22, 1921, a deputy sheriff Alfred Jackson Pate was shot and killed, and Williams was charged with first degree murder. The trial ended in a hung jury, but Williams decided to plead guilty to a lesser charge of second degree murder. He was given a 20-30 year sentence.

While serving time at the Caledonia State Prison Farm in Halifax County, North Carolina the superintendent, H.T. Peoples, noted his mechanical aptitude and allowed him access to the prison's machine shop where he demonstrated a genius for fashioning replacement parts for the guards' firearms from pieces of scrap automobile parts. In prison, he would save paper and pencils and stay up late at night drawing plans for various firearms. His extraordinary skills in the machine shop permitted him to stay ahead of his assignments and allowed him time for his own hobby. He began building lathes and other tools, and then parts for guns. His mother sent him technical data on guns and also provided him with contacts with patent attorneys. While in prison, he invented the short-stroke piston and the floating chamber principles that eventually revolutionized small-arms manufacture.

The family started a campaign to commute his sentence and they were joined by the sheriff to whom he had surrendered and the widow of the man he was accused of killing. Governor McLean reduced the sentence and in 1929 Williams went on parole and in 1931 he was released from prison.

Back in Cumberland County, he set to work perfecting his inventions. After two years, he went to Washington, DC to show his work to the War Department. He got his first contract to modify the .30 caliber Brownings to fire .22 caliber rimfire ammunition.

It was the use of his short-stroke piston in the M1 Carbine manufactured by Winchester and others, that brought his greatest fame and his nickname "Carbine Williams." General Douglas MacArthur called his light rapid-fire carbine "one of the strongest contributing factors in our victory in the Pacific."

Some have said that Williams' short-stroke piston was the work of others but his U.S. Patent 2,090,656 Sheet 5, (filed 1931), clearly shows gas being tapped off ahead of a chamber to a piston below.

He spent his last years in Godwin after some time in Connecticut. He died at Dorothea Dix Hospital in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1975.

His floating chamber was used in one of the most popular American .22 semi-automatic rifles, the Remington 550-A. Later, in 1954, the Winchester Model 50 Automatic shotgun was launched. This, too, featured the Williams Chamber, making it the first semi-automatic shotgun with a non-recoiling barrel. Also, the U.S. patents for the highly successful Benelli Shotgun (U.S. Patent 4,604,942 ) clearly reference Williams' U.S. Patent 2,476,232 .

In 1952, a film of his life was made by MGM starring Jimmy Stewart and Jean Hagen as his wife Maggie; Williams himself served as technical advisor.


PLEASE DO NOT REPORT THIS VIDEO. I KNOW I'VE UPLOADED THIS VIDEO WITHOUT PERMISSION, BUT PLEASE, I UPLOADED THIS VIDEO FOR EDUCATION PURPOSES ONLY, AND I DON'T GAIN ANY PROFIT FROM THIS. PLEASE, DON'T BE A JERK THAT ALWAYS INTERUPT OTHERS WHILE THEY ARE HAVING FUN. THANK YOU.

Category:

Education

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 7 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • 2:19... thats one hell of a bullet

  • @1ohtaf1 ...and the video proof.

see all

All Comments (360)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • @esh325

    Not mad just knowladgeable.

  • @Blahblobify You mad bra?

  • @esh325

    OMGWTFBBQ....the bullet design is the same the 30 m1 Carbine is a 110 grain pistol bullet that loses velocity FAST compared to a rifle bullet..

    The 30 M1 Carbine is .30 caliber bullet at 110 grains.

    At 200 yards, 30 M1 carbine round is doing just a tad better velocity than a .380 at the muzzle, and the .380 is FUCKING .36 caliber and weighing 90 grains you queer. At best the 30 M1 at 200 yards is like a 9mm Makarov and you are a retarded shitass fuckface

  • @Blahblobify It's not that simple. Just because it's going as fast as a .380 does not mean it hits like a .380. They are completely different rounds. Different diameter,different grains, and different bullet design.

  • @rubbindubbin4life reproduction around 800 with para stock about 1100

  • @rubbindubbin4life roughly 500-700 depending on where you look.

  • @esh325

    Sorry, you are mistaken. At 250 yards the 30 carbine's 110 grain bullet might be doing 1100 fps , just a bit more powerful than a .380.

  • Duz anyone know how much these go for...i been wanting one..

  • @Blahblobify But you fired a crummy civilian version. Maybe the barrel was bad on them. The .30 carbine will probably hit harder then a 5.56x45 will at 250 yards. The 5.56x45 is very unlikely to yaw or fragment at that distance.

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more