Birmingham Small Arms Serial Numbers

  1. Oct 10, 2010 The origins of the Birmingham Small Arms Company draw on that heritage. A thriving arms trade by Smiths and Cutlers had been mentioned as early as 1538. Groups of gunmakers from Birmingham had been supplying enormous amounts of arms to British as well as foreign armies since 1692. But after the Crimean War, Birmingham faced a crisis.
  2. Having reached the final design, the Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA), in all probability and under great secrecy, was commissioned to mass produce the Welrod pistol. The only distinguishing markings on the pistols were that of a little five-pointed star and square along with a serial number.
The Welrod Pistol
By Anders Thygesen

This rifle was produced at the Birmingham Small Arms Factory in 1916. It has no provision for the magazine cut off or the volley sight system. A stock disc blank is present. Numbers on the bayonet lug, barrel, receiver, and bolt are matched.

Having reached the final design, the Birmingham Small Arms Company (BSA), in all probability and under great secrecy, was commissioned to mass produce the Welrod pistol. The only distinguishing markings on the pistols were that of a little five-pointed star and square along with a serial number. All markings were stamped underneath on the tube right behind the pistol grip.
The serial numbers, numeric only, are either 4 or 5 ciphered and in addition to the above mentioned position also stamped into the breech and etched into the magazine with an electrical pen. Not all magazines bear serial numbers though. The very first bore no markings at all and the moulded ebonite grip was slightly differently shaped than on most of those we find today. Also, the magazine was of a different model which can best be distinguished on the magazine jaws.
The square and the five-pointed star appear without exception on all of the inspected weapons. Yet it has not been possible to establish their true significance.
BSA claims none of the pistols bore serial numbers or other markings that could reveal the manufacturer. They do however confirm having produced parts for the Welrod as well as entire pistols but adds that several other British companies were involved in the production. Following is an excerpt from their correspondence: “Regarding the information that you are requiring on the Welrod pistol, although we have in the past manufactured specific parts for these particular pistols, we have no information regarding production development or variations of these pistols. All we know is that they were produced by a number of companies in Britain including BSA and these were developed specifically for covert operations in occupied Europe. They, therefore, bore no serial numbers or indication as to where they were manufactured.”
But if BSA did not mark the weapons then who did? Some assert that the star and the square are American markings, but I believe this theory can be excluded on the basis of correspondence from The Naval Historical Centre who states: “The Navy purchased an unknown number of Welrods for use. It is my understanding that they were given US Navy markings, with a final acceptance marking that was either “USN” or a stamped anchor...The US Naval Gun Factory and other manufactures have small proof markings for some items, but none use the star. Part markings for NGF - made items may include blueprint drawing numbers, such as “NGF - 12345.”
I regret not being able to account for the significance of the markings in a more precise manner other than what is mentioned above. I will leave it up to each individual to draw their own conclusions. It is a fact however, that entirely unmarked Welrods do exist. It is plausible that the pistols could have left BSA unmarked only to be stamped at the point from which they were later distributed.
The production of the Mk II was not officially up and running until late 1943, but several documents reveals that it was indeed available at the beginning of 1943. According to the serial numbers, at least 14,000 were supposedly produced. Only at the end of 1944 was the production of the Mk I under way, and the amount produced is unknown. The beginning of the production of the Mk I is so late in the war that it is undoubtedly the reason it was never dropped to the resistance.
At long last, documentation proving that the USA apparently, too, produced a number of Welrods has been found. However, there is no information as to when and how many. I rest convinced though that the Welrods used by the Americans during World War II were all manufactured and delivered by the British. This assumption is further supported by a written report from a meeting between some British liaison officers and American OSS agents at the Maryland Research Laboratory, August 16, 1943 concerning silenced weapons. The Welrod was highly praised by all the participants and the report concludes: “It was felt that for that special type of mission, it was the best available design and the U.S. should proceed with purchase of production model Welrods rather than trying for a home-built version.”
Still the Americans at some point began manufacturing their own. At the MOD Pattern Room (now S.A.T.I.C.) in England they retain a specimen with a full inscription on the silencer tube. (Dan’s Note: The late H.J. Woodend told me that he found this U.S. Navy example in Hong Kong and personally brought it back to the MOD Pattern Room. Herbie delighted in showing everyone how we Americans liked to conspicuously mark our so-called clandestine weapons.)
Right after the serial number is stamped the anchor of the U.S Navy with a “U” on its left side and an “S” on its right. In addition is engraved #422072—1 on top of the silencer tube, #422074—2 on the muzzle cap and #422072—6 on the back of the breech. These engravings can very well be serial numbers for the individual parts as described in the letter from The Naval Historical Centre. As there are no stampings of the star or of the square on this model, the engravings agree well with the statement from The Naval Historical Centre. Even if at first glance it appears to be a British Welrod, there are discernable differences. The difference are clearly seen on the individual parts that bears resemblance of a different manufacturing process; just as the gun itself differs markedly by having something best described as an angle bar welded onto the side of the breech, presumably to facilitate operation of the weapon when wearing gloves.
During the 1960’s, a modified version of the Welrod Mk IIA was produced by Military Armament Corporation headed by Mitchell WerBell. The main differences from the original design consisted of replacing the ebonite on the grip with plastic and replacing the original insides of the tube with the more up-to-date silencer technology of Sionics. It has not been disclosed how many were made but most likely it was no more than a handful.
“Execution” Campaign
Newly released (2002) documents from the National Archives UK, reveals the planning of “Operation Execution Month” in June 1943. The operation called for the occupied countries to simultaneously assassinate as many Gestapo and SS officials as possible within a given month. For this purpose alone, a message went out to increase the production of Welrods in order to meet the demands of the pending campaign.
The operation was never carried out, probably due to fear of retaliation from the occupational forces. The Allies must have begun to realize the incalculable consequences of the previously carried out “Operation Anthropoid” at this point. This resulted in the terrible massacre in the Czech town of Lidice near Prague, where the entire male population was executed, all the women were deported, and the town itself was literally razed to the ground with bulldozers in retaliation for the assassination of SS Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich on May 27, 1942 by two Czech S.O.E agents.
Mk.I
I have studied the manuals for both the “Type A” and “Type B”, but to the best of my efforts there are no visible differences between the two. The difference is most likely in the internal suppressor tube construction.
In the manuals, under Function, General Description and Notes on Use, the texts are identical and read as follows. Function: The 9mm Welrod is a silent single shot pistol, intended for use by specially trained operators for specific tasks. General Description: The Weapon is a specially constructed single shot pistol with a detachable silencer. It is silent, reliable in action and easy to conceal. It is accurate up to 30 yards in daylight or 20 yards on a fairly light night, but is most effective when fired in contact with the target. Notes on Use: The gun has three distinct and separate uses. A) For aimed and deliberate shots in daylight or darkness. The effective range of the gun with normal handling is 15/30 yards. For deliberate shots, extreme accuracy is required and can only be obtained by correct trigger squeeze, i.e. a gradual squeeze by the whole hand. With training and practice it is possible to obtain very accurate groups at the distances mentioned. The gun should be held with the thumb and forefinger of the left hand as close up to the muzzle as possible, the pistol grip being held by the right hand. For standing shots, the left elbow should be as close to the body as possible and the rear of the gun approximately 6”/7”from the operator’s eye. B) Without its silencer and used as a single-shot weapon. C) By use of the weapon at the closest quarters, i.e. with the muzzle against the target. For this purpose no special training is required.
The construction itself is practically identical to that of the Mk IIA with the exception of a few details. The grip safety is slightly different in appearance but functions in the exact same manner. Placed underneath the tube right behind the grip safety, a secondary manually operated safety catch has been added. The trigger and trigger-function remains the same, but is now protected by a trigger guard. The magazine release has, due to the previously mentioned problems on the Mk II and Mk IIA, been moved in front of the grip and inside the trigger guard. The magazine is most likely from a .38 Colt Automatic, and the manual directs that although the total capacity allows for 6 bullets, that only 5 be loaded. The true difference lies with the suppressor tube that is two-piece. The rear piece, as with Mk II and Mk IIA, contains the breech, barrel and expansion chamber, whereas the front piece contains the baffles and washers section. The front piece, detachable just in front of the front sight, has a length of 4.9 inches bringing the pistol to a total length of 14.2 inches. The tube diameter is 1.4 inches, and the weight of the pistol is 48.2 ounce.
The advantage to a detachable front piece is obvious as this makes the weapon considerably easier to conceal. The pistol will function despite the front piece being removed; however the noise reduction will be minimal.
The few examples I have had the opportunity to examine have all been marked with a 5 digit serial number as well as the familiar “star and square” stamp under the receiver.
The barrel is perforated with 16 holes, allowing the powder gases to escape into the expansion chamber surrounding the barrel. In this case the holes serve the purpose of preventing the bullets from going supersonic as is the standard of 9mm Parabellum ammunition. The suppressor piece differentiates markedly from Mk II and Mk IIA. It consists of 2 washers and a couple of baffles separated by a metal spacer best described as looking like a spool from a sewing machine and perforated by 24 holes. The spacer creates yet another expansion chamber for the gases to cool off in before passing through the last washer. The muzzle velocity is approx. 1,000 fps. (305m/s).
Apart from the manually operated safety and the magazine release, the Mk I is operated and functions as the Mk II and Mk IIA. The iron sights are coated with a fluorescent material that, according the manual, renders the weapon efficient at 20 yards on a bright summer eve. The effective range in daylight is reported to be 30 yards. The recommended maximum shooting range is 24 yards.
Misinformation & Myth
It is necessary to mention the fact that in literature, the Welrod .32ACP is consistently referred to as Mk I just as the Welrod 9mm Parabellum is referred to as Mk II. In the case where the referral is to British Welrods, this is an error. It is safe to assume that the mix up occurred when the American .32ACP’s were designated Mk I, just to further confuse the issue. The Welrod Mk II was, from the beginning, constructed around caliber .32ACP. It was only later when some field operators, due to bad experiences, questioned the efficiency of the caliber .32ACP, that it was decided to further develop the Mk II. The result was the British Welrod Mk I, 9mm Parabellum.
To further add to the confusion, you will find that the American weapons literature in several places refer to the Welrod as “Hand Firing Device Mk I”. But on the Welrod that is kept in the Ministry of Defence/Pattern Room, the marking on the suppressor tube says: “.32 Hand Firing Mechanism Mk I.”
Additionally, in several places in literature, it can be found that the Welrod was developed by a British officer codenamed “Major Dolphin,” and that his real name was never revealed to the public. It is a fact that the Commander of the Frythe was Major John Robert Vernon Dolphin (later Lt. Col.). That he should have chosen a codename identical with his real name seems rather unlikely. This allegation is simply not true. Newly released documents from the National Archives UK, features a document that was produced towards the end of the war to ensure that the right persons would be properly credited for their inventions. The document reveals that the inventor of both the Welrod and the Sleevegun was Major H.Q.A. Reeves.
Major Hugh Quentin Alleyne Reeves was born in Seaford, Sussex late in 1909. Major Reeves was one of the most productive and creative engineers attached to Station IX. He was, among others, behind the Sten gun silencer, fluorescent night sights, the Sleeping Beauty and the Welgun but to mention a few. After the war he became involved in a project concerning noise reduction in jet engines. Unfortunately he was killed in an accident on October 25, 1955 at Bitteswell Airfield. Mr Reeves was investigating the problem of reducing noise from jet engines running on the ground. He was carrying out tests on a Hunter Mark V fitted with a Sapphire engine. While making an examination he was suddenly drawn into the intake of the silencer and received fatal injuries.
There are persistent rumors stating that the Welrod was also manufactured in calibers .380ACP and .45ACP. So far, this can not be confirmed, as I have been unable to find firm and trustworthy information on the subject.
Twice during my research I have come across information, stating that the Welrod was part of the equipment carried by 2nd Lt. Francis Gary Powers on board his American U2 spy plane when he was shot down over the USSR. This is not correct. Lt. Powers was armed with a silenced Hi-Standard model USA-HD caliber .22LR, serial number 120046. The serial number is not listed in High Standards annals, as the gun was delivered to the CIA, but that is another story entirely.
Status
Welrod Mk I and Mk IIA stayed in service for many years after the end of the war. Several, now retired, SAS (Special Air Service) operator’s report that the Welrod was in use during the Falklands, in Northern Ireland, and even as late as in the 1991 Gulf war. It is equally well documented that the American SOG (Studies and Observations Group) were using the Welrod in Vietnam.
Acknowledgment
I would like to take the opportunity to express my gratitude to the following in no particular order: Mr. J.M. Ramos for allowing the use of his drawing in my article. Dr. J. David Truby, Dr. John W. Brunner and Mr. Ralph Hagan for contributing with their help and knowledge. Museum Inspector Esben Kjeldbaek and Storage Manager Soren Rasmussen, both of The Museum of Danish Resistance 1940-1945, Copenhagen. Police Inspector Ole Rasmussen and Weapons Technician Palle Larsen, both of the Federal Danish Police department of weapons technology.

This article first appeared in Small Arms Review V9N5 (February 2006)
and was posted online on March 15, 2013

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BSA: Guns

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1915. BSA Rifle. Model 303
1915. BSA Rifle. Model 303
1915. BSA Rifle. Model 303
January 1919.
Dec 1921.
1923.
February 1925.
June 1929.
1933.
November 1952.
November 1952.
1953.
Serial
October 1954.

Note: this is a sub-section of BSA

of Small Heath, Birmingham. Telephone: Central 6440 (9 lines). T.A.: 'Armoury, Birmingham'. (1929)

of Birmingham, 11. Telephone: Birmingham, Victoria 2381 (20 lines). Cables: As above. (1947)

of Armoury Road, Birmingham


1861 Company formed[1]. The object of forming the company was to begin making small arms by machinery to meet the growing competition from the mechanised government factory at Enfield. A 25 acre site was bought at Small Heath, (then just outside the Birmingham boundary), and two years later the factory was in operation.

1864 First Government military arms contract.

By 1866 the company could record a profit of £7,000 and in a few short years it became the largest private arms manufacturer in Europe. One order from the Prussian government,then at war with Austria, was not for rifles but for cartridge cases - 40 million of them. Rather than turn it down the directors acquired a munitions factory and changed the title to the Birmingham Small Arms and Metal Company Limited.

1870s Towards the end of the decade, the Small Heath factory was completely closed for twelve months and the future looked impossibly dark. A small contract enabled the works to be opened again.

1880 Edward Carl Fredrich Otto had designed a strange type of bicycle with two large wheels on either side of the rider. He demonstrated it by riding on the boardroom table under the noses of the astonished directors - and so impressed them that they put the device into production immediately.

This first venture into the transport field was followed by more conventional bicycles and tricycles, but a sudden increase in the demand for rifles at the end of the 80s caused the directors to drop cycle work.

Birmingham Small Arms Serial Numbers

During the Boer Wars (1880 to 1881 and 1899 to 1902) the company supplied many thousands of rifles to the British forces.

1897 The company reverted to its original title. The early prosperity was short-lived. As wars ceased, the demand for weapons fell, and the private arms trade was the first to suffer.

1900 Birmingham Small Arms Co and the Royal Small Arms Factory (Enfield) shared the large orders for the Lee-Enfield Rifle; the Royal Small Arms Factory (Birmingham) would probably be called on to help although it had principally be involved in repair work in the past few years[2].

1906 Took over the Royal Small Arms Factory (Birmingham) at Sparkbrook

Birmingham Small Arms Serial Numbers

1910 The company makes the Lee-Enfield Rifle (consisting of 97 component parts) and cycle parts. They have 16 steam hammers, 24 steam drop hammers, 13 Ryder forging machines, 5 Oliver hammers and 60 smiths' hearths.

1914 Manufacturers of military rifles for HM Government, sporting and match rifles, the BSA air rifle, the WO miniature rifle, BSA cycles, motor cycles and cycle fittings, BSA motor cars, BSA small tools, gauges etc., shot gun barrels. Employees 5,250. [3]

WWI Made the Lewis gun.

WWI In the First World War the BSA factories were turned over almost entirely to munitions work. Huge quantities of service rifles, machine guns, military motorcycles, and the world's first folding bicycles were supplied to the troops.

1919 The BSA company restructured into three divisions. BSA Guns Ltd became a private company.

1929 Listed Exhibitor - British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of BSA 12-bore and .410-bore Shot Guns, BSA Rifles, including High Velocity Sporting; .303 and .22 Target and Sporting, Repeating and Air Rifles. BSA Scientific Cleaners, etc. (Stand No. B.4) [4]

1930s Right through the 30s, BSA rifle production had been confined to comparatively small quantities of sporting weapons. The company's considerable amount of arms plant had been maintained out of a sense of duty. It would take a book to describe fully the activities of the BSA organisation during the last war.

Apart from the company's own factories in Birmingham, Coventry, Redditch, Sheffield and Durham, many dispersal units and shadow factories were used for the purpose of arms production. The Small Heath administration alone (BSA Cycles and BSA Guns) controlled 67 factories, employing 28,000 people and containing 25,000 machine tools. This organisation produced more than half the small arms supplied to Britain's forces during the war.

WWII BSA's war production included nearly half a million of the Browning machine guns with which RAF Spitfires and Hurricanes won the Battle of Britain; one and a quarter million service rifles (Lee Enfield .303); 400,000 Sten guns; machine guns (568,100 .303 Browning and 60,000 BESA 7.92), cannon, anti-tank rifles, and gun carriages, ten million shell fuses,over three and a half million magazines, and 750,000 anti-aircraft rockets.

Several Group factories were heavily bombed and at Small Heath more than 50 employees lost their lives. At this works alone, more machine tools were destroyed or damaged by enemy action than were lost in the whole of the Coventry blitz.

1947 Listed Exhibitor - British Industries Fair. Manufacturers of Guns and Rifles for Sporting and Target Purposes, (Olympia, 1st First, Stand No. F.1814) [5]

As an emblem of their craft they adopted the sign of three crossed rifles, which has since become world-known as the Piled Arms trademark.

1961 Employs 1,350 persons producing rifle, shot-gun and air-rifles.

Although the company no longer makes military weapons, BSA Guns Ltd maintains a steady flow of air rifles, hunting rifles and sporting guns to most parts of the world, exporting its manufactured products.

Small Heath Factory

1863: 'GUN MAKING BY MACHINERY.
THE NEW FACTORY AT SMALL HEATH
At Small Heath, during the last twelve months or so, there has been springing up, silently but swiftly, a large manufactory which, so far as we can see, is destined to be the forerunner of a vast revolution in the conduct of our leading manufacture - the Gun Trade. Established on the American plan adopted at Enfeld and London, the new factory will be perfectly self-contained. In other words, wood and metal will be carted in at one end; will then pass through no end of machines, of all sorts and sizes, and finally come out at the other end in the shape of a number of guns ready for use, and the whole of this work will be accomplished without extraneous aid. Even the tools are to be manufactured on the premises, so that, in the first place, there is in this new factory the germ of a system which has for its object the complete abolition of the old plan of giving out work to be done by the workmen at their own private workshops. In the next place, nearly the whole of the several processes of the manufacture will be accomplished by machinery. The stocks will be sawn, and shaped by machinery, and almost finished by machinery. The barrels will be welded and drilled, and turned and bored, by machinery. Every minute part of the lock will be fashioned by machinery, and the brass furniture will be turned out perfect by similar means. Very little special knowledge, therefore, will be required in the workmen. An intelligent mechanic, who was never in a rough-stocking shop in his life, can be taught to feed the machine, so to speak,i n a few hours; and under his management the stocks will come out as perfect in form as they would had he been a gun stock maker all his life. The machines, in fact, do all the work, the workmen only have to supply them with materials to operate upon. And as skilled labour is thereby, to a great extent, dispensed with, and the manufactory is completely self-contained, strikes, it is thought, if not rendered altogether powerless, will certainly become a kind of weapon chiefly dangerous to those who use them. Another innovation, too, upon our old method of gun making, lies in the adoption at the new factory of the interchangeable system. Every part of the gun, as well the pins and screws as the stock and barrel, will be made so true to gauge, that, given a hundred stocks and a hundred barrels, any one will fit another; or, given a hundred locks reduced to parts, those parts may all be interchanged in the process of re-forming, and yet each lock be perfect. In other words, a lock made to-day will fit a gun made twelve months hence, or a hammer made twelve months hence will fit a nipple made to-day. The uses of this system of interchangeability of parts have, we are told, been exemplified in a remarkable manner during the progress of the American war. Ruined arms on the battle field have been gathered together and new guns formed of their parts, a stockless barrel and a barrel-less stock making a second perfect rifle, And it is said that but for the adoption of this economical method it would have been impossible to obtain small arms enough to supply the troops. The first nation, therefore, to bring the new system to a practical test was that which introduced it. Strongly imbued with the spirit of that old proverb of ours, which avers that more may be done by stratagem than strength, your American avoids hard labour as much as in him lies, and racks his brain for expedients to supersede it by machinery. In the pursuit of this laudable object he lighted, amongst other matters equally ingenious, upon a plan of making guns by machinery. And that plan is now, we believe, the sole one in operation in the States. The only other country into which it has been introduced in its entirety is England; and the third manufactory erected for the purpose of putting it in practice here is that at Small Heath, of which we are now speaking. The other two are the Enfield Manufactory and the works of the London Armoury Company. Portions of the system have been introduced, we believe, both in Russia and in Spain, but in neither do they work satisfactorily, for the simple reason that the manufactare is one which, like file-making by machinery, must, to be of any use, be adopted in its entirety, The new manufactory at Small Heath, therefore is, with the exception of those in America, one of the only three of the kind in the whole world.
Having said thus much by way of preface we now come to the establishment itself. It was originated some eighteen months or two years since by the leading Birmingham manufacturers of Government small arms, and a company was formed for carrying out their plans. A plot of land at Small Heath, twenty-six acres in extent, bounded by the Great Western Railway, the Warwick and Birmingham Canal, and Golden Hillock Lane, was purchased; and plans being prepared by Mr.T. W. Goodman, architect, the building of the proposed manufactory was entrusted to Mr, Jones, of Belmont Row. It is not yet complete in all its parts, nor will it be for probably some time to come, for the erection of the smithing department has been deferred for a while, the rough barrels being for the present bought in instead of being manufactured on the premises. As it is, however, the building covers nearly two acres of land. Its form is quadrangular, the front, facing Golden Hillock Lane, comprises a central gabled block of building, three stories high, with a clock in the apex, and arched entrance; a two-story wing on each side the central block, and a second gabled block three stories high at the terminal angle of each wing. Altogether the frontage extends some 250 feet, 60 feet being given to each of the wings, 50 to the central, and 40 each to the terminal blocks. The style, we suppose, is a kind of Italian Gothic; the material red brick, with stone dressings and coloured bands. Running back from the left hand terminal block is another range of building, two stories high and 160 feet in length, its angle being formed by another three-story block like those in front. From this block there branches out another two story range, forming the third side of a quadrangle. The fourth side is not yet erected. The two-story portions of the building are some 40 feet in height, and the gabled blocks 60. So far the exterior of the building, about which there is an air of strength, combined with elegance, is in keeping with the purpose to which it is devoted, and the wealth of the trade under whose aegis it has grown up. Passing through the arched entrance into the interior of the quadrangle, we come first upon the engine stack - a structure reflecting equal credit upon architect and builder. The shaft, 150 feet in height, and perpendicular as a plummet, Is worked into the base in the same manner as an engaged brooch spire is worked in ; and the base, which is square, is doubly buttressed at the angles. The diameter of the flue is five feet and a half, and the diameter of the shaft 10 feet at the bottom and 7 feet at the top. As indicative of its strength, we were informed that during the gale last Thursday, while other stacks were swaying to and fro like reeds, the new stack of which we are speaking, though more exposed than many, scarcely trembled even under the pressure of the fiercest of the gusts. ..... [text omitted here for brevity]

'..... Entering by the door on the left of the arched entrance, we come first upon the offices of the chief engineer, the draughtsmen, and the clerks, and passing by them we find ourselves in the rough stocking room – an apartment measuring 60 feet by 40. Here we find the steam-driven circular saw cutting the stocks out of the rough, and a series of machines through which they are passed to shape theme. To enter into a detailed description of the operations of each machine would be to carry us far beyond our purpose and space. Suffice it to say, that the broad principle of one and all is this: Below a revolving cutting tool there is smooth wheel; in the front of the smooth wheel is a pattern stock of iron, and in front of the cutting tool is the rough sawn wooden stock; the two stocks are affixed to one part of the machine, the two wheels to the other, and both parts may be brought nearer to or farther from each other. Now, as the smooth wheel passes over the irregularities of the pattern stock, it imparts its own forward or backward motion to the cutting wheel, which, operating upon the wooden stock, cuts it according to pattern. One machine cuts one part of the stock, another another, and another another, until the roughing is complete, and the stock is ready for the finishers in the room above, of which more presently. Out of the rough stocking room we pass into the brass furniture room - an apartment 40 feet square, occupying the basement of the left-hand terminal block. Here again we find an almost endless variety of machines of the most complicated and interesting character, each a study in itself, and all intended to perform some part in the fashioning of brass gun furniture. Out of this room we turn into the basement of the side wing, an apartment 160ft. in length by 40ft. wide, the ceiling supported by massive iron columns placed at intervals of twenty feet from each other. This room is devoted to the general machining department, and, as may be gathered from its purpose, is lined with machines of all sorts and kinds used in making gun barrels and locks. To this room the newly-forged barrel is brought, and there it goes through the processes of drilling, turning, boring, and rifling. Here the breech is milled and completed for the finishers upstairs; and here the thousand and one processes of lock and band and sight making are performed. Out of this noisy and bustling, but still orderly apartment, we pass into the company's inspecting room (40 feet square), where every completed part of a gun, even the smallest, is subjected to inspection before the assembling of all the parts for the final fitting together takes place. Thence we pass on in succesion to the model and tool making department (60 feet by 40), where all the models and tools used in the manufactory are made and repaired; to the metal stores (40 feet square), and to the smithing department, where the locks in all their parts, and the bands and sights are forged at some twenty grim, roaring stitheys. Out of this department we pass into the hardening, annealing, and blueing shop, where there are some fifteen other furnaces of different kinds - some for annealing, some for hardening, and some for blueing. And now we have passed through all the basement shops on the left-hand side of the building. Ascending a flight of steps by the model and tool making shop we come upon the second floor, and make our way back to the central block of building over the rooms on the basement through which we have just passed. The first room in which we find ourselves is the carpenters shop - an apartment 100 feet long by 40 wide. After the fitting up of the building, however, it stands to reason that the carpenters will not require so large a shop as this, and it is therefore intended to halve it lengthwise, allotting one half to the carpenters and appropriating the other to the following purpose. Next to this room and over the company's inspecting room is the Government inspecting room, and it is proposed that, when things are in full working order, half the present carpenters' shop shall be set apart for the Government packing room, so that the Government guns after inspection may pass clean out of the building without interfering with any other department, Out of the Government Inspecting Room in the corner block, the third story of which will be a kind of supplementary machining room, we pass into another immense apartment over the general machining room, and of the same size. Here there will be a large number of machines for the more minute work, and here also the filing and finishing of certain parts of the locks and barrels will be accomplished. And so we pass on through the assembling department to the stock finishing room, which is in the left front wing, over the rough stocking shop. And here will be put up some of the most interesting machines we have ever seen - as picturesque in appearance as they are useful in operation, their motions as minute and complicated as those of a watch, and their strength as great as that of an elephant. We feel curious to see all these machines at work. From this apartment we may pass on over the gateway by the board room and the show room to the right wing, of the building at present unoccupied, but intended for store-rooms, &c. Leaving the business departments in this wing, however, we may briefly state the offices, &c, are very conveniently and neatly arranged. On the second floor, as we have before stated, is the Board-room, which, while in keeping with the rest of the building, is decorated with a little quiet ornament ; and descending thence by a flight of stone steps, with neat Gothic balustrades, we come upon the offices of the General Manager, with their fire-proof rooms, and every other convenience attached. This brings us once more into the gateway, and there remains only one other part of the building to inspect.

'We have not yet visited the giant whose strong steam-supplied lungs and iron thews work every machine in the vast building. This gentleman partakes of the nature of a kind of Behemoth Siamese twins. He is neither more nor less than a pair of horizontal condensing engines, of a combined 60-horse power (but capable of indicating 200), with a 26-inch cylinder and a three-feet stroke. The main fly-wheel, 15 feet 7 inches in diameter, gives power to the shafting through the medium of two 13 inch double leather bands. No gearing therefore is used; and seeing that several processes in the manufacture are of so delicate a nature that the slightest irregularity of movement would create much additional work if not an effect more serious, the improvement in this respect is a matter of vast importance. The engines are fixed upon a bed of brickwork, 12 feet deep, and the bolts that hold them down are screwed through a solid plate of iron 9 feet down in the bricklwork. Steam is supplied both to drive the engine and manufactory by two tubular boilers measuring 27 feet by 7 feet.

'The engines, boilers, and mill gearing are supplied by Messrs. Hick and Sons, of Bolton; and the American machinery in use throughout the manufactory has been supplied by the Ames Manufacturing Company of Chicopee, the same company who supplied similar machinery to the authorities at Enfield and the London Armoury. The remaining machines are supplied by Messrs. Greenwood and Batley, of Leeds, who have also had to do with Enfield and London. The tools and fixtures, in almost endless variety, however, have been provided by the Ames Company. The manager is Mr. B. M'Kay, formerly with Mr. Whitworth; and the chief engineer, Mr. C. M. M'Farland, a member of the Ames Company, builder of the Enfield machinery, and for some time chief engineer of the London Armoury Company's Works. It is calculated that, as at present constructed, the factory will turn out a thousand stand of arms weekly, and that when complete it will turn out two thousand. The Enfield factory is supposed to send out 2,000 weekly, and the London Armoury Company 900 weekly. The cost of the Small Heath building it is supposed will reach £20,000. ; of the cost of the machinery we can form no estimate at present.'[6]


See Also

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Sources of Information

Birmingham Small Arms Serial Numbers By Remington Rand 1911

  1. [1] BSA Website
  2. Leicester Chronicle 10 February 1900
  3. 1914 Whitakers Red Book
  4. 1929 British Industries Fair p12
  5. 1947 British Industries Fair p19
  6. Birmingham Daily Post, 8 December 1863

Birmingham Small Arms Serial Numbers For Sale

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