America's first assault rifle? Well, it does
meet all the requirements: select-fire, intermediate cartridge, and
shoulder-fired. It was never actually fielded, though.
The
Burton Light Machine Rifle was developed during World War One, with the
firing model completed in 1917. It was intended as an aircraft
observer's weapon for attacking balloons—a role which required
incendiary ammunition.With this in mind, Winchester's Frank Burton
adapted the .351 WSL cartridge from his 1905 and 1907 self-loading
rifles into the .345 WSL, with a spitzer bullet. He designed an
open-bolt, select-fire shoulder rifle to fire it, which became known as
the Light Machine Rifle.
Burton's rifle was to be usable both in an aircraft
where it could be fixed to a Scarff mount for a wide field of fire or
used by an individual on the ground, fired from the shoulder. It weighed
in at just about 10 pounds (4.5kg) and had a pistol grip and
straight-line design to bring the recoil impulse directly into the
shooter's shoulder and minimize rise during automatic fire. The barrel
was finned for better cooling, and infantry barrels were equipped with
bayonet lugs.
The most distinctive elements of the design, of course, are the dual
top-mounted magazines. Each one holds 20 rounds, and each has a pair of
locking catches. One position locks the magazine into a feeding
position, and the other holds it up above the cycling of the bolt. The
idea here was to keep a second loaded magazine easily accessible for an
aerial observer—so they could reload without having to find another
magazine somewhere in the aircraft. Contrary to some speculation, there
is no automatic transition between magazines. When one is empty, the
shooter must pull it back to the second locking position (or out of the
gun entirely) and then push the second magazine down into feeding
position.
Despite Burton's work—which was well ahead of its
time—the LMR had been rendered obsolete for its primary role by the time
it was ready. Synchronized, forward-mounted Vickers machine guns firing
11mm incendiary ammunition were being mounted on aircraft, and were
more effective on balloons and airplanes than Burton's weapon would have
been. Only this single example was ever made, and it was not presented
for infantry consideration as far as I can tell. It was lost for many
years before being discovered in a Winchester building, and eventually
ending up in the Cody Firearms Museum with the rest of the Winchester factory collection.
Ian McCollum is the founder of ForgottenWeapons.com, a website and YouTube channel dedicated preserving the history of rare and obscure guns from around the world.
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