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(Confirmed kills 1,250 m (1,367 yd) or greater or greater)
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[[File:Royal Marines snipers displaying their L115A1 rifles.jpg|thumb|right|Royal Marines snipers with L115A1 rifles. These rifles are similar to the [[L115A3]] Long Range Rifle used by [[Craig Harrison (sniper)|Craig Harrison]] but outfitted with Schmidt & Bender 3-12x50 PM II telescopic sights.]]
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: ''This article is about the [[American]] WW2 [[insurgency weapon]].  For the shotgun, see [[Winchester Liberator]]; for the 3D printable pistol, see [[Defense Distributed Liberator]].
[[File:Tac50.jpg|thumb|alt=McMillan Tac-50 Sniper weapon|The [[McMillan Tac-50]] rifle [[Rob Furlong|Corporal Rob Furlong]] used.]]
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{{gun
 +
|name= The Liberator
 +
|image= M1942 liberator.jpg
 +
|caption= The FP-45/M1942
 +
|origin= [[United States]]
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|type= [[single shot]] [[pistol]]
 +
<!-- Specifications -->
 +
|frame= stamped sheet metal
 +
|length= 5.55 in (141 mm)
 +
|barrel= 4 in (100 mm)
 +
|length_pull=
 +
|no_of_barrels=
 +
|weight= 1 lb (450 g)
 +
|width=
 +
|height=
 +
|cartridge= [[.45 ACP]]
 +
|caliber=
 +
|gauge=
 +
|action=
 +
|trigger_pull=
 +
|chambers= 1, conical
 +
|twist= none
 +
|ROF= (maybe) 6 RPM
 +
|muzzle_velocity= 820 ft/s (250 m/s)
 +
|range=
 +
|max_range= 8 yd (7.3 m)
 +
|feed= [[Single-shot]]
 +
|sights= [[iron sights]] so crude they may as well have not even been there.
 +
|radius=
 +
<!-- Service history -->
 +
|service= 1942–1945
 +
|used_by= Dropped into occupied territories for use by insurgents
 +
|wars= [[World War II]]
 +
<!-- Production history -->
 +
|designer= George Hyde<ref name="AR">Bruce N. Canfield "Desperate Times: The Liberator Pistol" [[American Rifleman]] [[August 2012]] pp.48-51 & 83-84</ref>
 +
|design_date= May 1942<ref name="AR"/>
 +
|manufacturer= Guide Lamp Corporation of General Motors<ref name="AR"/>
 +
|unit_cost= $2.10 (1942)<ref name="AR"/>
 +
|production_date= June – August 1942<ref name="AR"/>
 +
|number= 1,000,000
 +
|variants=
 +
|notes=
 +
}}The '''[[FP-45 Liberator]]''' was a [[pistol]] manufactured by the [[United States]] military during [[World War II]] for use by resistance forces in occupied territories.  The purpose of the gun was to arm resistance forces on a large scale to deter and lower the morale of armies of the axis powers. The ''Liberator'' was never issued to American or Allied troops and there is no documented instance of the weapon being used for their intended purpose. Many FP-45 pistols were never distributed and were destroyed by Allied forces after the war; and most of those distributed were lost or disposed of without ever seeing any combat use.<ref name="AR"/>
  
Reports regarding the '''longest recorded sniper kill''' that contain information regarding the shooting distance and the identity of the [[sniper]] have been presented to the general public since 1967. Snipers in modern [[warfare]] have had a long history since the development of long distance weaponry. As weapons, [[ammunition]], and aids to determine ballistic solutions improved, so, too, did the distance from which a kill could be targeted.
+
==Project History==
 +
[[Image:Musee-de-lArmee-IMG 1038.jpg|thumb|left|FP-45 Liberator on display in Les Invalides]]
  
The modern methodology of long-distance sniping (over 1.25-kilometre (0.8 mi) shots) requires intense training and practice. A sniper must have the ability to accurately estimate the various factors that influence a [[bullet]]'s [[external ballistics|trajectory and point of impact]], such as range to the target, wind direction, wind velocity, [[air density]], elevation, and even the rotation of the earth under the bullet of the sniper and target. Mistakes in estimation compound over distance and can cause a shot to only injure, or to miss completely.<ref name="Plaster p. ">Plaster, John L. (1993). ''The ultimate sniper: an advanced training manual for military & police snipers'' (1993 ed.). Paladin Press. ISBN 978-0-87364-704-5.</ref>
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The concept was suggested by a [[Poland|Polish]] military attache in [[March 1942]]. The project was assigned to the US Army Joint Psychological Warfare Committee and was designed for the United States Army two months later by the Inland Manufacturing Division of the General Motors Corporation in Dayton, Ohio. Production was undertaken by General Motors Guide Lamp Division to avoid conflicting priorities with Inland Division production of the [[M1 carbine]].<ref name="AR"/> The army designated the weapon the ''Flare Projector Caliber .45'', hence the designation FP-45. This was done to disguise the fact that a pistol was being mass produced. The original engineering drawings label the [[barrel]] as "tube", the trigger as "yoke", the [[firing pin]] as "control rod", and the trigger guard as "spanner".
  
Devices such as [[laser rangefinder]]s, handheld meteorological measuring equipment, handheld computers, and ballistic-prediction software can contribute to increased accuracy.
+
The Guide Lamp Division plant in Anderson, Indiana assembled a million of these weapons.  The ''Liberator'' project took about 6 months from conception to end of production with about 11 weeks of actual manufacturing time, done by 300 workers. Using that figure, 300 people produced a pistol with 23 parts every 6.6 seconds, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for 11 weeks &mdash; making it probably the only pistol in the entire [[history of firearms|history of gunfire]] that could be ''manufactured'' faster than it could be ''loaded''. Loading this clunker takes about 10 seconds.
  
==History==
+
=== Concentration camps ===
The science of long-range sniping came to fruition in the [[Vietnam War]].  [[Carlos Hathcock]] held the record from 1967 to 2002 at 2,286 m (2,500 yd).<ref name="Scott">Henderson, Charles (2003). Silent Warrior (2003 ed.). Berkley Books. ISBN 0-425-18864-7.</ref>  He recorded 93 official kills before an injury halted his service on the front lines.<ref name="Gaijinass">[http://gaijinass.wordpress.com/2010/05/06/1655/ "The way of the Gun: USMC S/S"] [http://gaijinass.wordpress.com Gaijinass]</ref>  After returning to the U.S., Hathcock helped to establish a school for training Marine snipers, the Marine Corps [[Scout Sniper]] School, at the Marine base at [[Marine Corps Base Quantico|Quantico, Virginia]].<ref name="Scott"/>  It took over thirty years for Canadian [[Arron Perry|Master Corporal Arron Perry]] of [[Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry]] to beat Hathcock's record.  Perry held the title for only a few days as another man in his unit ([[Rob Furlong|Corporal Rob Furlong]]) bested Perry's distance with a 2,430 m (2,657 yd) shot in March 2002.  Furlong took the shot while supporting American soldiers during [[Operation Anaconda]] in the beginning years of the latest [[War in Afghanistan (2001–present)|War in Afghanistan]].
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Contrary to popular myth, the Liberator was ''never'' intended to be dropped on concentration camps with the bizarre notion that internees would pick up the weapons, overcome Nazi Guards, and liberate the camp.  
  
The current record is held by  Briton [[Craig Harrison (sniper)|Corporal of Horse (CoH) Craig Harrison]], recorded a 2,475 m (2,707 yd) shot in November 2009 also during in the War in Afghanistan; in which he shot two machine gunners consecutively.<ref name="Smith p. "/>
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Forgetting, for the moment, the flummoxingly ludicrous notion that a group of half-starved civilians with crude single shot weapons would somehow be able to overcome a trained military force complete with [[MP 40|SMGs]], [[MG 34|machine gun towers]], and all the other then-state-of-the-art German equipment, the horrors of the "final solution" were considered nothing more than wild rumors in the early years of the war &mdash; useful for propaganda purposes but not considered reliable intelligence. Such barbarity was considered to be simply too inhuman to have actually been committed, even for the Germans.
  
===Unconfirmed Australian claim===
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It was not until advancing Allied forces began liberating the camps, beginning with the nearly intact capture of [[wikipedia:Majdanek concentration camp|Majdanek (Konzentrationslager Lublin)]] in [[July 1944]], that Allied Command began to realize the true scale of the Nazi atrocities.<ref>C. Peter Chen [http://ww2db.com/battle_spec.php?battle_id=136 "Discovery of Concentration Camps and the Holocaust: 24 Jul 1944 - 29 Apr 1945"] ''World War II Database''</ref>
In October 2012, [[Chris Masters (writer)|Chris Masters]], a reporter for the [[The Daily Telegraph (Australia)|Australian ''The Daily Telegraph'']], quoted an unnamed source that claimed that an unknown [[Australian]] soldier from [[2nd Commando Regiment (Australia)|Delta Company, 2nd Commando Regiment]] had made a shot at 2,815 m (3,079 yd) using a .50 cal Barrett M82 rifle in Afghanistan.  If this shot is confirmed it will have broken the 2,475 m (2,707 yd) record held by Craig Harrison.  In the ''Daily Telegraph'' article Masters claimed that multiple shooters were engaged in a targeted kill mission.<ref name= "Masters p.">Masters, Chris (October 29, 2012). [http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/taliban-remain-in-fear-of-lethal-strikes-writes-chris-masters/story-e6frezz0-1226504862496 "Taliban remain in fear of lethal strikes"]. dailytelegraph.com.au. Australian Daily Telegraph.</ref> The Master's news article has however not been confirmed by either the Australian military nor by the Australian government, and the article in The Daily Telegraph remains the only source for it, so it can not be included in the list.
+
  
==Confirmed kills 1,250 m (1,367 yd) or greater or greater==
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[[File:Liberator-Left.jpg|thumb|]]
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%;"
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|-
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!Sniper
+
!Date
+
!Distance
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!Weapon
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!Ammunition
+
!Nationality
+
!Military Unit
+
!Conflict
+
|-
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| Corporal of Horse (CoH) [[Craig Harrison]] || Nov-09 || 2,475 m (2,707 yd) || [[Accuracy International]] [[L115A3]] || [[.338 Lapua Magnum]] LockBase B408 bullets || [[United Kingdom]] || Household Cavalry – Life Guards || War in Afghanistan
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|-
+
| Corporal [[Rob Furlong]] || Mar-02 || 2,430 m (2,657 yd) || McMillan Tac-50 || [[Hornady]] A-MAX .50 ([[.50 BMG]]) || [[Canada]] || 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry || War in Afghanistan
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|-
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| Master Corporal [[Arron Perry]] || Mar-02 || 2,310 m (2,526 yd) || [[McMillan Tac-50]] || Hornady A-MAX .50 (.50 BMG) || Canada || 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry || War in Afghanistan
+
|-
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| Sgt. Brian Kremer || Mar-04 || 2,300 m (2,515 yd) || [[Barrett M82A1]] || [[Raufoss Mk 211|Raufoss NM140 MP]] (.50 Cal) || [[United States]] || 2nd Ranger Battalion || Iraq war
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|-
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| Gunnery Sergeant [[Carlos Hathcock]] || Feb-67 || 2,286 m (2,500 yd) || [[M2 Browning machine gun]] || .50 BMG || United States || United States Marine Corps || Vietnam war
+
|-
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| Nicholas Ranstad || Jan-08 || 2,092 m (2,288 yd) || Barrett M82A1 || .50 BMG || United States || United States Army 1-91 Cav/173d ABCT || War in Afghanistan
+
|-
+
| Chief Petty Officer [[Chris Kyle]] || Aug-08 || 1,920 m (2,100 yd) || [[McMillan Tac-338]] || .338 Lapua Magnum || United States || US Navy SEAL - Team 3, Charlie || Iraq war
+
|-
+
| Corporal Christopher Reynolds || Aug-09 || 1,853 m (2,026 yd) || Accuracy International L115A3 || .338 Lapua Magnum LockBase B408 bullets || United Kingdom || 3 Scots – The Black Watch || War in Afghanistan
+
|-
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| Billy Dixon || June 1874 || 1,406 m (1,538 yd) || Sharps .50-90 || .50-90 Sharps || United States || Civilian Buffalo Hunter || American Indian Wars
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|-
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| Unknown [[Norwegian]] [[sniper]]<ref>Longest confirmed kill using 12.7 mm multi-purpose ammunition</ref> || Nov-07 || 1,380 m (1,509 yd) || Barrett M82A1 || Raufoss NM140 MP (.50 Cal) || Norway || Norwegian Army 2nd Battalion || War in Afghanistan
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|-
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| Staff Sergeant Jim Gilliland<ref>Longest confirmed kill with a 7.62x51mm NATO chambered rifle</ref> || 27-Sep-05 || 1,250 m (1,367 yd) || [[M24 rifle]] || [[7.62x51mm NATO]] || United States || 2nd Battalion, 69th Armored Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division Sniper Shadow Team || Iraq war
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|}
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[[File:Carlos Hathcock DM-SD-98-02324.JPG.jpg|thumb|Carlos Hathcock in 1996]]
+
;Notes
+
{{References}}
+
  
==See also==
+
==Design==
*[[Sniper#Warfare|History of sniping]]
+
The FP-45 was a crude, [[single-shot]] pistol designed to be cheaply and quickly mass produced. The Liberator had just 23 largely stamped and turned steel parts that were cheap and easy to manufacture.  It fired a [[.45 ACP|.45 caliber]] pistol [[cartridge]] from an [[rifling|unrifled]] barrel.  Due to the lack of rifling, it was intended for very close ambush, 1–4 yd (also known as "spitting distance"). Its maximum effective range was only about 25 ft (7.6 m).  At longer range, the bullet would begin to tumble wildly and stray off course.  The weapon's conical, rather than straight, [[chamber]] didn't help matters either, as it allowed lateral play of the loaded round (this feature could perhaps be considered an asset when loading the weapon in dirty field conditions, but it does nothing for accuracy).
*[[Francis Pegahmagabow]], a Canadian sniper with 378 confirmed kills, the highest in [[World War I]].<ref name="Brownlie p. 63">{{harvnb|Brownlie|2003|p=63}}</ref>
+
 
*[[Simo Häyhä]], the Finnish sniper, who, using a standard [[Iron sight|iron-sighted]] bolt-action rifle, recorded the highest number of confirmed kills in any major war (505 or 542).<ref name="Westwood p. 212">{{harvnb|Westwood|2005|p=212}}</ref>
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Another issue is excessive [[headspace]], up to .020” free play between the cover slide and the [[breech]] end of the barrel. 
*[[Staff Sergeant|SSG]] [[Adelbert Waldron]], an American sniper who currently holds the record for the highest number of confirmed kills for American snipers during the Vietnam War (109).<ref name="Fredriksen p. 306">{{harvnb|Fredriksen|2010|p=306}}</ref>
+
 
* [[Lyudmila Pavlichenko]], a Soviet sniper during World War II, credited with 309 kills, and is regarded as the most successful female sniper in history.
+
Every FP-45 that left the factory for service was tested once and some were test fired 50 times to the point they were deemed unserviceable as a part of the quality control process<ref>Ralph Hagan, ''The Liberator Pistol, Development, Production, Distribution.'' 1996</ref>.  Because of the low quality, it was nicknamed the "Woolworth gun."[[File:Liberator-Right.jpg|thumb|]]
*[[Vasily Zaytsev]], the Soviet sniper who amassed 225 kills during the [[Battle of Stalingrad]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.warheroes.ru/hero/hero.asp?Hero_id=481 |title=Герой Советского Союза Зайцев Василий Григорьевич :: Герои страны |publisher=Warheroes.ru |date= |accessdate=2012-09-05}}</ref>
+
<gallery>
{{-}}
+
File:Liberator pistol.png|An extremely simple gun.
 +
File:Libinst.jpg|And so easy to use, too...
 +
File:Musee-de-lArmee-IMG 1038.jpg|Opposite side.
 +
</gallery>
 +
 
 +
=== Safety ===
 +
{{quote|It is our position at Vintage Ordnance that it is flatly unadvisable to fire any original FP-45 Liberator Pistol because of some inherent weaknesses related to their design that could result in damage to the weapon and injury or death to the shooter or others in the vicinity.  In addition, compared to modern arms of the same era, FP-45s appear to be more likely to accidentally discharge if jarred or dropped while cocked or carried with the cocking piece resting on a chambered round.  (A Vintage Ordnance replica made in 2009 would share this in common with a 67 year old original.)|Vintage Ordnance Co. LLC}}
 +
 
 +
==Wartime use==
 +
The ''Liberator'' was shipped in a cardboard box with 10 rounds of .45 ACP, a wooden dowel to poke out the empty cartridge case (think of a [[ramrod]] packing a [[musket]]), and a comic strip instruction sheet<ref name="ESAA">Bishop, Chris (2006). ''The Encyclopedia of Small Arms and Artillery''. Grange Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-84013-910-5.</ref> showing how to load and fire the weapon.  Extra rounds of ammunition could be stored in the pistol grip. The ''Liberator'' was a crude and clumsy weapon, never intended for front line service.  It was originally intended as an [[insurgency weapon]] to be mass dropped behind enemy lines to resistance fighters in occupied territory.  The notion was that a resistance fighter would to recover the weapon, sneak up on an Axis occupier, kill or incapacitate him, and snatch up his (much better) weapons.<ref>Riiiight...  great idea, guys.</ref>
 +
 
 +
The weapon was valued more for its psychological warfare effect as its actual field performance. It was thought that if an unholy buttload of these weapons could be delivered into Axis-occupied territory, it would have a devastating effect on the morale of occupying troops.  The plan was to drop the weapon in such great quantities that occupying forces could never capture or recover all of them.  It was hoped that the thought of thousands of these unrecovered weapons potentially in the hands of the citizens of occupied countries would have a deleterious effect on enemy morale.<ref>Wolfgang Michel: ''Die Liberator Pistole FP-45: Partisanenwaffe und Instrument der psychologischen Kriegsführung''. ISBN 978-3-8370-9271-4</ref>
 +
 
 +
General Eisenhower's staff, however, were more realistic and never saw the practicality in mass dropping the ''Liberator'' over occupied Europe, and authorized distribution of fewer than 25,000 of the half million FP-45 pistols shipped to [[Great Britain]] for the [[French]] resistance. Generals Joseph Stillwell and Douglas MacArthur were no more enthusiastic about the other half of the pistols scheduled for shipment to the Pacific. The Army then turned 450,000 ''Liberators'' over to the Office of Strategic Services. Resistance fighters in both theatres were supplied with more effective weapons whenever possible, and French use of the FP-45 remains completely undocumented; although OSS did distribute a few to [[Greek]] resistance forces in [[1944]]. 100,000 FP-45 pistols were shipped to [[China]] in [[1943]], but the number actually distributed remains unknown.  A few were distributed to [[Philippine]] troops under the Commonwealth Army and Constabulary and resistance fighters.<ref name="AR"/>
 +
 
 +
==Firearms collectors==
 +
The original delivered cost for the FP-45 was US$2.40/unit<ref name="ESAA" /> ($33.35 in 2012, adjusted for inflation). A ''Liberator'' in good condition today can fetch approximately $1200, with the original box bringing an additional $500. Add in an original extremely rare paper instruction sheet and the value could rise above $4500 to a collector of rare World War II militaria.  Fakes of these sheets exist, but authentic copies have a watermark that can be seen clearly, which has proven extremely difficult for counterfeiters to duplicate.
 +
 
 +
==The Concept Revived==
 +
The Liberator was replaced with the [[Deer gun]] in [[1964]] when a "modernized" (if you can call it that with a straight face) equivalent was designed for possible use in [[Vietnam]].<ref name="ESAA"/> This was because the CIA needed a weapon of this type and most of the Liberators, considered by the military to be the next best thing to useless, had been scrapped after World War II.
 +
 
 +
The Deer Gun was chambered for [[9x19mm Parabellum]] and was loaded by ''unscrewing the barrel'' and inserting the next round to fire.  [[Spray and pray]], baby; spray and pray.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{reflist|20em}}
+
{{references}}
  
==Bibliography==
+
== External links ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
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* [http://www.justguns.com/handguns/fp-45-liberator.html The Liberator Pistol] at JustGuns.com{{dead link}}
*{{cite web |ref=harv|date= May 2, 2010|url = http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/sniper_kills_qaeda_from_mi_away_sTm0xFUmJNal3HgWlmEgRL|title = Sniper kills Qaeda-from 1½ mi. away|publisher = [[New York Post]]| accessdate = May 3, 2010 | last=Alpert| first= Lukas|quote=}}
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* [http://vintageordnance.homestead.com/FP45_Firing.html "Safe handling of Liberator pistols and modern replicas"].  Vintage Ordnance Company.
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Brownlie|first=Robin | authorlink = | title = A fatherly eye: Indian agents, government power, and Aboriginal resistance in Ontario, 1918-1939|edition=2003|year=2003| publisher = [[University of Toronto Press]]| isbn= 978-0-19-541784-5 }} <small>- Total pages: 204 </small>
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* [http://www.liberatorpistolbook.com/ ''The Liberator Pistol'', by Ralph Hagan]
*{{cite web |ref=harv|date= May 2, 2010 |url = http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/view/133379/Sniper-s-Taliban-shots-earn-him-place-in-military-record-books/|title = Sniper's Taliban shots earn him place in military record books|publisher = [[Daily Star (United Kingdom)|The Daily Star]]| accessdate = May 3, 2010 | last=Chandler| first= Neil |quote=}}
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*{{cite web |ref=harv|date= May 2, 2010|url = http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1270414/British-sniper-sets-new-sharpshooting-record-1-54-mile-double-Taliban-kill.html|title = The super sniper: Hero picks off two Taliban from a mile and a half away|publisher = [[Daily Mail]]| accessdate = May 3, 2010 | last=Drury| first= Ian |quote=}}
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*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Fredriksen|first=John C.| authorlink = | title = The United States Army: A Chronology, 1775 to the Present|edition=2010|year=2010| publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]]| isbn= 978-1-59884-344-6 }} <small>- Total pages: 327 </small>
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*{{cite web |ref=harv|date= January 1, 2006|url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/1506760/Sniper-shot-that-took-out-an-insurgent-killer-from-three-quarters-of-a-mile.html|title = Sniper shot that took out an insurgent killer from three quarters of a mile|publisher = [[The Sunday Telegraph]]| accessdate = May 5, 2010 | last=Harnden| first= Toby |quote=}}
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*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Henderson|first=Charles | authorlink = | title = Silent Warrior|edition=2003|year=2003| publisher = [[Berkley Books]]| isbn= 0-425-18864-7 }} <small>- Total pages: 336 </small>
+
*{{cite web|ref=harv|last=Masters|first=Chris|title=Taliban remain in fear of lethal strikes|url=http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/taliban-remain-in-fear-of-lethal-strikes-writes-chris-masters/story-e6frezz0-1226504862496|work=dailytelegraph.com.au|publisher=[[The Daily Telegraph (Australia)|Australian Daily Telegraph]]|accessdate=1 November 2012|date=October 29, 2012|quote=}}
+
*{{cite web |ref=harv|publisher=[[Verdens Gang]] |url=http://www.vg.no/nyheter/innenriks/artikkel.php?artid=537887 |title=Dreper fra 1380 meter (English translation: Kills from 1380 meters) |accessdate=2008-10-08 |date=October 7, 2008 |last=Johnsen|first=Nilas |language=Norwegian }}
+
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Jowett|first=Philip |last2=Jowett|first2=Philip S.|last3=Snodgrass|first3=Brent | authorlink = | title = Finland at War 1939–45|edition=2006|year=2006| publisher = [[Osprey Publishing]]| isbn= 978-1-84176-969-1}} <small>- Total pages: 64 </small>
+
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Plaster|first=John L. | authorlink = John Plaster| title = [[The Ultimate Sniper|The ultimate sniper: an advanced training manual for military & police snipers]]|edition=1993|year=1993| publisher = [[Paladin Press]]| isbn= 978-0-87364-704-5 }} <small>- Total pages: 453 </small>
+
*{{cite news |ref=harv|date= May 2, 2010|url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/afghanistan/article7113916.ece|title = Hotshot sniper in one-and-a-half mile double kill|publisher = [[The Sunday Times]]| accessdate = May 3, 2010 | last=Smith| first= Michael |quote=}}
+
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Souter|first=Gerry | title = American Shooter: A Personal History of Gun Culture in the United States|edition=2012|year=2012| publisher = Potomac Books Inc| isbn= 9781597976909 }} <small>- Total pages: 300 </small>
+
*{{cite book |ref=harv|last=Westwood|first=Dr. David| authorlink = | title = Rifles: an illustrated history of their impact|edition=2005|year=2005| publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]]| isbn= 978-1-85109-401-1 }} <small>- Total pages: 470 </small>
+
{{refend}}
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[[Category:Snipers]]
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[[Category:Insurgency weapons]]
[[Category:World records]]
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[[Category:World War II firearms]]
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[[Category:Single shot pistols]]
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[[Category:.45 pistols]]
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[[Category:American pistols]]
 +
[[Category:crude firearms]]

Revision as of 10:10, 15 May 2013

This article is about the American WW2 insurgency weapon. For the shotgun, see Winchester Liberator; for the 3D printable pistol, see Defense Distributed Liberator.
The Liberator
M1942 liberator.jpg
The FP-45/M1942

Type single shot pistol
Land of Origin United States
Specifications
Frame stamped sheet metal
Length 5.55 in (141 mm)
Barrel length 4 in (100 mm)
Weight 1 lb (450 g)
Cartridge .45 ACP
Chambers 1, conical
Rifling/Twist none

Rate of Fire (maybe) 6 RPM
Muzzle velocity 820 ft/s (250 m/s)
Max. Range 8 yd (7.3 m)
Feed Single-shot
Sights iron sights so crude they may as well have not even been there.
Service History
In service 1942–1945
Used by Dropped into occupied territories for use by insurgents
Wars World War II
Production History
Designer George Hyde[1]
Design Date May 1942[1]
Manufacturer Guide Lamp Corporation of General Motors[1]
Unit Cost $2.10 (1942)[1]
Produced June – August 1942[1]
No. Built 1,000,000
The FP-45 Liberator was a pistol manufactured by the United States military during World War II for use by resistance forces in occupied territories. The purpose of the gun was to arm resistance forces on a large scale to deter and lower the morale of armies of the axis powers. The Liberator was never issued to American or Allied troops and there is no documented instance of the weapon being used for their intended purpose. Many FP-45 pistols were never distributed and were destroyed by Allied forces after the war; and most of those distributed were lost or disposed of without ever seeing any combat use.[1]

Contents

Project History

FP-45 Liberator on display in Les Invalides

The concept was suggested by a Polish military attache in March 1942. The project was assigned to the US Army Joint Psychological Warfare Committee and was designed for the United States Army two months later by the Inland Manufacturing Division of the General Motors Corporation in Dayton, Ohio. Production was undertaken by General Motors Guide Lamp Division to avoid conflicting priorities with Inland Division production of the M1 carbine.[1] The army designated the weapon the Flare Projector Caliber .45, hence the designation FP-45. This was done to disguise the fact that a pistol was being mass produced. The original engineering drawings label the barrel as "tube", the trigger as "yoke", the firing pin as "control rod", and the trigger guard as "spanner".

The Guide Lamp Division plant in Anderson, Indiana assembled a million of these weapons. The Liberator project took about 6 months from conception to end of production with about 11 weeks of actual manufacturing time, done by 300 workers. Using that figure, 300 people produced a pistol with 23 parts every 6.6 seconds, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for 11 weeks — making it probably the only pistol in the entire history of gunfire that could be manufactured faster than it could be loaded. Loading this clunker takes about 10 seconds.

Concentration camps

Contrary to popular myth, the Liberator was never intended to be dropped on concentration camps with the bizarre notion that internees would pick up the weapons, overcome Nazi Guards, and liberate the camp.

Forgetting, for the moment, the flummoxingly ludicrous notion that a group of half-starved civilians with crude single shot weapons would somehow be able to overcome a trained military force complete with SMGs, machine gun towers, and all the other then-state-of-the-art German equipment, the horrors of the "final solution" were considered nothing more than wild rumors in the early years of the war — useful for propaganda purposes but not considered reliable intelligence. Such barbarity was considered to be simply too inhuman to have actually been committed, even for the Germans.

It was not until advancing Allied forces began liberating the camps, beginning with the nearly intact capture of Majdanek (Konzentrationslager Lublin) in July 1944, that Allied Command began to realize the true scale of the Nazi atrocities.[2]

Liberator-Left.jpg

Design

The FP-45 was a crude, single-shot pistol designed to be cheaply and quickly mass produced. The Liberator had just 23 largely stamped and turned steel parts that were cheap and easy to manufacture. It fired a .45 caliber pistol cartridge from an unrifled barrel. Due to the lack of rifling, it was intended for very close ambush, 1–4 yd (also known as "spitting distance"). Its maximum effective range was only about 25 ft (7.6 m). At longer range, the bullet would begin to tumble wildly and stray off course. The weapon's conical, rather than straight, chamber didn't help matters either, as it allowed lateral play of the loaded round (this feature could perhaps be considered an asset when loading the weapon in dirty field conditions, but it does nothing for accuracy).

Another issue is excessive headspace, up to .020” free play between the cover slide and the breech end of the barrel.

Every FP-45 that left the factory for service was tested once and some were test fired 50 times to the point they were deemed unserviceable as a part of the quality control process[3]. Because of the low quality, it was nicknamed the "Woolworth gun."
Liberator-Right.jpg

Safety

Leftquot.png It is our position at Vintage Ordnance that it is flatly unadvisable to fire any original FP-45 Liberator Pistol because of some inherent weaknesses related to their design that could result in damage to the weapon and injury or death to the shooter or others in the vicinity. In addition, compared to modern arms of the same era, FP-45s appear to be more likely to accidentally discharge if jarred or dropped while cocked or carried with the cocking piece resting on a chambered round. (A Vintage Ordnance replica made in 2009 would share this in common with a 67 year old original.) Rightquot.png
Vintage Ordnance Co. LLC

Wartime use

The Liberator was shipped in a cardboard box with 10 rounds of .45 ACP, a wooden dowel to poke out the empty cartridge case (think of a ramrod packing a musket), and a comic strip instruction sheet[4] showing how to load and fire the weapon. Extra rounds of ammunition could be stored in the pistol grip. The Liberator was a crude and clumsy weapon, never intended for front line service. It was originally intended as an insurgency weapon to be mass dropped behind enemy lines to resistance fighters in occupied territory. The notion was that a resistance fighter would to recover the weapon, sneak up on an Axis occupier, kill or incapacitate him, and snatch up his (much better) weapons.[5]

The weapon was valued more for its psychological warfare effect as its actual field performance. It was thought that if an unholy buttload of these weapons could be delivered into Axis-occupied territory, it would have a devastating effect on the morale of occupying troops. The plan was to drop the weapon in such great quantities that occupying forces could never capture or recover all of them. It was hoped that the thought of thousands of these unrecovered weapons potentially in the hands of the citizens of occupied countries would have a deleterious effect on enemy morale.[6]

General Eisenhower's staff, however, were more realistic and never saw the practicality in mass dropping the Liberator over occupied Europe, and authorized distribution of fewer than 25,000 of the half million FP-45 pistols shipped to Great Britain for the French resistance. Generals Joseph Stillwell and Douglas MacArthur were no more enthusiastic about the other half of the pistols scheduled for shipment to the Pacific. The Army then turned 450,000 Liberators over to the Office of Strategic Services. Resistance fighters in both theatres were supplied with more effective weapons whenever possible, and French use of the FP-45 remains completely undocumented; although OSS did distribute a few to Greek resistance forces in 1944. 100,000 FP-45 pistols were shipped to China in 1943, but the number actually distributed remains unknown. A few were distributed to Philippine troops under the Commonwealth Army and Constabulary and resistance fighters.[1]

Firearms collectors

The original delivered cost for the FP-45 was US$2.40/unit[4] ($33.35 in 2012, adjusted for inflation). A Liberator in good condition today can fetch approximately $1200, with the original box bringing an additional $500. Add in an original extremely rare paper instruction sheet and the value could rise above $4500 to a collector of rare World War II militaria. Fakes of these sheets exist, but authentic copies have a watermark that can be seen clearly, which has proven extremely difficult for counterfeiters to duplicate.

The Concept Revived

The Liberator was replaced with the Deer gun in 1964 when a "modernized" (if you can call it that with a straight face) equivalent was designed for possible use in Vietnam.[4] This was because the CIA needed a weapon of this type and most of the Liberators, considered by the military to be the next best thing to useless, had been scrapped after World War II.

The Deer Gun was chambered for 9x19mm Parabellum and was loaded by unscrewing the barrel and inserting the next round to fire. Spray and pray, baby; spray and pray.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Bruce N. Canfield "Desperate Times: The Liberator Pistol" American Rifleman August 2012 pp.48-51 & 83-84
  2. C. Peter Chen "Discovery of Concentration Camps and the Holocaust: 24 Jul 1944 - 29 Apr 1945" World War II Database
  3. Ralph Hagan, The Liberator Pistol, Development, Production, Distribution. 1996
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Bishop, Chris (2006). The Encyclopedia of Small Arms and Artillery. Grange Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-84013-910-5.
  5. Riiiight... great idea, guys.
  6. Wolfgang Michel: Die Liberator Pistole FP-45: Partisanenwaffe und Instrument der psychologischen Kriegsführung. ISBN 978-3-8370-9271-4

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