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The Winchester Model 1897, also known as the Model 97, M97, Riot Gun, or Trench Gun, is a pump-action shotgun with an external hammer and tube magazine manufactured by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. The Model 1897 was an evolution of the Winchester Model 1893 designed by John Browning. From 1897 until 1957, over one million of these shotguns were produced. The Model 1897 was offered in numerous barrel lengths and grades, chambered in 12 and 16 gauge, and as a solid frame or takedown. The 16-gauge guns had a standard barrel length of Template:Convert, while 12-gauge guns were furnished with Template:Convert barrels. Special length barrels could be ordered in lengths as short as Template:Convert or as long as Template:Convert. Since the time the Model 1897 was first manufactured, it has been used to great effect by American military personnel,Template:Sfn law enforcement officers,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn and hunters.Template:Sfn

HistoryEdit

The Winchester Model 1897 was designed by American firearms inventor John Moses Browning. The Model 1897 was first listed for sale in the November 1897 Winchester catalog as a 12 gauge solid frame.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The 12 gauge takedown model was added in October 1898, and the 16 gauge takedown model in February 1900.Template:Sfn Originally produced as a tougher, stronger and more improved version of the Winchester Model 1893, itself an improvement on the early Spencer 1882 pump-action shotgun, the 1897 was identical to its forerunner, except that the receiver was thicker and allowed for use of smokeless powder shells, which were not common at the time. The 1897 introduced a "take down" design, where the barrel and magazine tube could easily be separated from the receiver for cleaning or transportation, the ease of removal of the barrel becoming a standard in pump shotguns made today, like the Remington 870 and Mossberg 500 series. Over time, "the model 97 became the most popular shotgun on the American market and established a standard of performance by which other kinds and makes of shotguns were judged, including the most expensive imported articles".Template:Sfn The Winchester Model 1897 was in production from 1897 until 1957. It was in this time frame that the "modern" hammerless designs became common, like the Winchester Model 1912, the Ithaca Model 1937, and the Remington 870. The Model 1897 was superseded by the Winchester Model 1912.Template:Sfn However, the gun can still be found today in regular use.

Improvements from the 1893Edit

While designing the new Model 1897, many of the weaknesses present in the earlier Model 1893 were taken into account and remedied.Template:Sfn These improvements included:

  • The frame was strengthened and made longer to handle the newer smokeless powder 12 gauge Template:Frac inch shell, as well as the older and shorter black powder Template:Frac inch shell.Template:Sfn
  • The top of the frame was covered so that the ejection of the fired shell was entirely from the side.Template:Sfn This added a lot of strength to the frame of the gun and it allowed the use of a Template:Frac inch shell without the danger of the gun constantly jamming.Template:Sfn
  • The action could not be opened until a slight forward movement of the slide handle released the action slide lock. In firing, the recoil of the shotgun gave a slight forward motion to the slide handle and released the action slide lock which enabled the immediate opening of the action. In the absence of any recoil, the slide handle had to be pushed forward manually in order to release the action slide lock.Template:Sfn
  • A movable cartridge guide was placed on the right side of the carrier block to prevent the escape of the shell when the shotgun was turned sideways in the act of loading.Template:Sfn
  • The stock was made longer and with less drop.Template:Sfn

Of these improvements, the slide lock is the one that made the Model 1897 into a safe firearm. This improved slide lock kept the shotgun locked until actual firing occurred which prevented it from jamming in the case of a misfire. The slide lock "stands in such a relation to the body of the firing pin as will prevent the firing pin reaching the primer until the pin has moved forward a sufficient distance to insure locking of the breech bolt".Template:Sfn This prevents the action sleeve "from being retracted by the hand of the gunner until after firing, and hence rendering the firearm more safe".Template:Sfn

DescriptionEdit

File:Action open.JPG
Open action on an 1897 portraying the long slide that projects from the receiver.

The Winchester Model 1897 and the Winchester Model 1893 were both designed by John Browning. The Model 1897 is an external hammer shotgun that is lacking a trigger disconnector. This means that the user can hold the trigger down while cycling the shotgun and once the action is returned to battery the shotgun fires.Template:SfnTemplate:Fv The firearm itself is classified as a slide action pump shotgun. It was the first truly successful pump-action shotgun produced. Throughout the time period the Model 1897 was in production, over a million of the type were produced in various grades and barrel lengths. 16-gauge guns had a standard barrel length of Template:Convert, while 12-gauge guns were furnished with Template:Convert length barrels. Special length barrels could be ordered in lengths as short as Template:Convert, and as long as Template:Convert. Along with various grades and barrel lengths, the Model 1897 came in two different chamberings. One was the 12 gauge and the other was the 16 gauge.Template:Sfn The shells should be of the Template:Frac inch or Template:Frac inch models.Template:Sfn Any shells larger are not recommended. An average Model 1897 can hold 5 or 6 shotgun shells in the magazine tube.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Cbignore</ref> When working the action of the Model 1897 the forend (fore grip) is pulled back, forcing the breech bolt to the rear which extracts and then ejects the spent shell while simultaneously cocking the external hammer by pushing it to the rear. When the forend is slid forward again, the breech bolt pushes a fresh shell into the gun's chamber and locks into place.

The Chinese company Norinco has made an effort to reproduce this firearm. The Norinco 97 is an almost exact copy of the Winchester 1897, produced in both Trench and Riot grades, yet lacking in the fit and finish of the originals.Template:Sfn

Grades of the Model 97Edit

File:97 and Norinco.JPG
Model 1897 (trench grade) and the reproduced Norinco (riot grade)
Grades of the Model 1897Template:Sfn
Grade Gauge Barrel (inches) Production dates Remarks
Standard 12,16 Template:Convert, Template:Convert 1897–1957Template:Sfn Plain walnut stock with steel buttplate
Trap 12,16 Template:Convert, Template:Convert 1897–1931Template:Sfn Fancy walnut with checkering
Pigeon 12,16 Template:Convert 1897–1939Template:Sfn Same as Trap, but hand-engraved receiver
Tournament 12 Template:Convert 1910–1931Template:Sfn Select walnut; receiver top matte to reduce glare
Brush 12,16 Template:Convert 1897–1931Template:Sfn Shorter magazine, plain walnut without checkering, solid frame
Brush Takedown 12,16 Template:Convert 1897–1931Template:Sfn Same as above, but with takedown frame
Riot 12 Template:Convert 1898–1935Template:Sfn Plain walnut, solid or with takedown frame
Trench 12 Template:Convert 1917–1945Template:Sfn Same as riot gun but with heat shield, bayonet lug, and sling swivels

Original pricesEdit

When the Model 1897 was first introduced, the price depended upon what grade was being purchased and what features were being added to that specific shotgun. To purchase a plain finished shotgun would cost the buyer $25, whereas an engraved receiver with checkered and finer wood included cost $100.Template:Sfn The more expensive grades of the Model 1897 were the standard, trap, pigeon, and tournament grades. These were the grades that were normally equipped with an engraved receiver and with checkered, finer wood.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The less expensive and plainer grades were the Brush, Brush Takedown, Riot, and Trench. These grades were not given the higher valued wood or special designs.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This is because these guns were designed and built for hard abuse. These grades stood a higher chance of being badly damaged so there was no need to put extra money into them for appearance purposes. As the functions that were performed with these grades required them to be lightweight, it was not beneficial to use heavy and expensive wood when designing them. Most often, when these grades were purchased, they were purchased in high numbers. By designing these grades with standard wood and finish, it kept the prices at a lower level.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They were also sold in German catalogues for prices comparable to luxury double-barreled shotguns.<ref>Alpha-Catalogue 1911: Winchester Model 1897 (variants, details and sales prices in German-Mark (1911)), Page 302, archive.org.</ref>

Military useEdit

File:WncsterCatMod97trench.jpg
Winchester Model 1897 trench gun

The Model 1897 was issued to American soldiers during the Philippine–American War of 1899. This first major use of issued shotguns by the United States military involved 200 weapons procured and sent to the Philippines in 1900. They were employed in countering Moro tribesmen who engaged the Americans in close-quarter combat using knives and swords.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> (See: juramentado)

File:Winch M97 M12 trench guns.jpg
Winchester M97 and M12 trench guns

During the punitive expedition in Mexico, some US soldiers were also equipped with M97s.Template:Sfn When the United States entered World War I, there was a need for more service weapons to be issued to the troops. It became clear to the United States just how brutal trench warfare was, and how great the need was for a large amount of close-range firepower while fighting in a trench, after they had observed the war for the first three years.Template:Sfn The Model 1897 Trench grade was an evolution of this idea. The pre-existing Winchester Model 1897 was modified by adding a perforated steel heat shield over the barrel which kept the soldier's hands off a hot barrel,Template:Sfn and an adapter with bayonet lug for affixing an M1917 bayonet.Template:Sfn

File:Bayonet Mount.JPG
Model 1897 adapter that allowed the attachment of the M1917 bayonet

This model was ideal for close combat and was efficient in trench warfare due to its 20-inch cylinder bore barrel. Buckshot ammunition was issued with the trench grade during the war. Each round of this ammunition contained nine 00 (.33-caliber) buckshot pellets. This gave considerable firepower to the individual soldier by each round that was fired.Template:Sfn

It has been said that American soldiers who were skilled at trap shooting were armed with these guns and stationed where they could fire at enemy hand grenades in midair.Template:Sfn

Unlike most modern pump-action shotguns, the Winchester Model 1897 (versions of which were type classified as the Model 97 or M97 for short) fired each time the action closed with the trigger depressed (that is, it lacks a trigger disconnector). Coupled with its five-shot capacity, this made it effective for close combat, such that troops referred to it as a "trench sweeper". This characteristic allowed troops to fire the whole magazine with great speed, known as "slam firing". Shortly before the end of the war, the German government protested the use of shotguns in combat, claiming it to cause unnecessary suffering.<ref name="state1918">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Sfn The Model 1897 was used again in World War II by the United States Army and Marine Corps, where it was used alongside the similarly militarized version of the hammerless Model 1912.Template:Sfn Some were still in service during the Korean WarTemplate:Sfn and the Vietnam War.Template:Sfn

World War I protestsEdit

The Winchester Model 1897 shotgun was widely used by American forces during World War I, particularly in trench warfare. Its effectiveness in close-quarters combat led to a formal protest by the German government on 19 September 1918. Germany claimed that the use of shotguns violated the laws of war, specifically citing Article 23(e) of the 1907 Hague Convention, which prohibits weapons causing unnecessary suffering. The protest threatened that any U.S. soldier captured with a shotgun or its ammunition would be subject to execution. In response, the U.S. government, through Secretary of State Robert Lansing and Acting Judge Advocate General Brigadier General Samuel T. Ansell, rejected the German protest. They argued that the shotgun was a lawful weapon of war, comparable to other accepted weapons like shrapnel shells and machine guns. The U.S. warned that any execution of American prisoners would result in reprisals.<ref>The 1918 Shotgun Protest</ref>

Despite the controversy, there are no known instances of German forces executing American soldiers for possessing shotguns. However, the U.S. military reportedly censored photographs of trench guns in combat to avoid further diplomatic issues and to prevent negative perceptions among Allied nations.<ref>The Trouble With Trench Guns</ref>

During the First World War, both the French and British high commands evaluated shotguns for trench warfare but declined to adopt them, chiefly because ammunition performance was unreliable in damp conditions and reload rates were slower than those of rifles.<ref>https://forums.spacebattles.com/threads/why-did-no-one-else-use-shotguns-in-the-world-wars.817802/</ref><ref>https://www.americanrifleman.org/content/the-truth-about-trench-guns/</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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Other usesEdit

After the war, a shorter-barrelled version of the Model 1897 was marketed by Winchester as a riot gun. Messengers of The American Express Company were armed with this weapon as were various police departments throughout the US.Template:Sfn The differences between this riot version and the trench version were that the riot version lacked the heat shield and bayonet lug,Template:Sfn and all trench guns were equipped with sling swivels, whereas most riot guns were not.Template:Sfn

UsersEdit

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See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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CitationsEdit

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General and cited referencesEdit

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