MANUFACTURER – Auto Ordnance Company, Cleveland, Ohio, and New York, NY
STATUS – Obsolete
SERVICE – None, Demonstration pieces
This was the pre-production prototype of the Thompson M1921. Numbers are unknown, but it is thought there were less than 40 specimens produced. There are minor differences between many of the specimens of the weapon as the design was being refined as they were produced. Noticeable characteristics are that the weapons had no sights added and no common provision for a butt stock (though it was being developed at the time), along with a vertical foregrip and finned barrel for additional cooling. One of the last of the Model 1919s were supplied by Thompson to Colt Manufacturing to use as a pattern for Colt’s licensed production of the Model 1921 Thompson.
During the early development of this weapon, roughly the year 1919, the term “Submachine gun” was coined to describe this pistol-caliber, automatic weapon. The term accounted for the fact that the design was capable of full automatic fire but was not a true “machine gun” since it did not fire a rifle cartridge. The specimens of Model 1919 produced were primarily used for demonstration and to further the development of the design.
* Weight varies from specimen to specimen. This weight is for “No. 26.”