Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless
Colt Pocket Hammerless | |
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Pocket Hammerless in .380 ACP Caliber | |
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Type | Semi-auto pistol |
Land of Origin | USA |
Specifications | |
Length | 7 in (178mm) (Type 1) 6.75 in (171mm) (Types 2-5)) |
Barrel length | 4 in (102mm) (Type 1) 3.75 in (95mm) (2-5)) |
Weight | 33 oz (936 g) |
Cartridge | .32 ACP (M1903) .380 ACP (M1908) |
Action | single-action blowback |
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Feed | 8 or 7-round detachable box magazine (M1903 or 1908) |
Sights | fixed front, rear drift-adjustable for windage |
Production History | |
Designer | John Browning |
Manufacturer | Colt Patent Firearms Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut |
Produced | 1903-1945 |
Variants | M1903, M1908 (Types 1-5) |
These pistols were popular civilian firearms for much of their life, and also served as United States General Officer pistols from the 1940s until their replacement by the M15 General Officers pistol in the 1970s. The Office of Strategic Services issued the Model 1903 to its officers during World War Two.
Many gangsters of the pre-World War Two era favored the Model 1903 and Model 1908 because they were relatively small and easily concealed. It is said that Al Capone kept one in his coat pocket and Bonnie Parker used one to break Clyde Barrow out of jail after smuggling it into the jail by taping it to her thigh.
Note: There was also a Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer pistol in .38 ACP, but this design is unrelated. The FN Model 1903 pistol design is related to the Colt Pocket Hammerless, but it is physically larger due to its chambering in 9 x 20 mm SR Browning Long cartridge.
Contents |
[edit] History
Approximately 570,000 Colt Pocket Hammerless pistols were produced from 1903 to 1945, in five different types (see Variants paragraph below). Some were issued to US Army and US Air Force general officers from World War II through the 1970s, when stocks ran out. Recipients included Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, Marshall, and Patton. Patton's Model 1908 was embellished with three (later four) stars on the grip panels to denote his rank. General Officer models were issued with a brown or black (depending on service and regulations) leather holster, pistol belt, and ammunition pouch. A cleaning rod and two spare magazines were also included. The pistol was often engraved with the officer's name.
[edit] Design
Special features include a serrated slide to prevent slippage during manual cycling of the slide, and two safety mechanisms (a grip safety and a manual safety). A magazine safety was added on later models. Despite the title 'Hammerless', the Model 1903 does have a hammer, but it is hidden from view by the gun's slide. In 1908, a .380 ACP version of this gun was introduced. Called the Model 1908, it was nearly identical to the Model 1903 except for the bore diameter and the magazine, which held seven rounds (one less than the Model 1903).
Grip panels were black checked hard rubber, checked walnut, or special order materials (ivory, mother of pearl, inset medallion).
Sights were fixed, although the rear sight was drift-adjustable for windage.
Metal finish was blued or nickel, and some special-order finishes such as engraved, silver or gold plated.
[edit] Variants
- Type I: separate barrel bushing, 4 inch barrel, no magazine safety, Serial numbers 1 through 71,999
- Type II: separate barrel bushing, 3 3/4 inch barrel; 1908-1910, SN 72,000 through 105,050
- Type III: integrated barrel bushing, 3 3/4 inch barrel; 1910-1926, SN 105,051 through 468,789
- Type IV: integrated barrel bushing, 3 3/4 inch barrel, magazine safety
- Type V: integrated barrel bushing, 3 3/4 inch barrel, military sights, magazine safety on both commercial and "U.S. Property" variations. SN 468,097 through 554,446.
There was also an M1903 version with a military Parkerized finish, which is otherwise the same as the Model IV, SN 554,447 through 572,214.
- Police marked variations.
[edit] Bibliography
- Brunner, John W. (1996). The Colt Pocket Hammerless Automatic Pistols. Phillips Publications.
[edit] Resources
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[edit] External links
This article is part of a series on the works of John Moses Browning | ||
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Semi-automatic pistols | FN M1900 · Colt M1900 · Colt M1902 · FN Model 1903 · M1903 Pocket Hammer · M1903 Pocket Hammerless · M1908 Vest Pocket · FN Model 1910 · M1911 · Colt Woodsman · Baby Browning · Hi-Power | |
Rifles | Winchester Model 1885 · Winchester Model 1886 · Winchester 1892 · Winchester Model 1894 · Winchester Model 1895 · Remington Model 8 · Remington Model 24 · FN Trombone | |
Shotguns | Winchester Model 1887 · Winchester Model 1897 · Browning Auto-5/Remington Model 11 · Remington Model 17 · Savage Model 520 · Browning Superposed · Ithaca 37 | |
Machine guns | Colt-Browning M1895 · Browning M1917 · Browning Automatic Rifle · Browning M1919 · M2 Machine Gun | |
Cartridges | .25 ACP · .32 ACP · .38 ACP · .380 ACP · .45 ACP · .50 BMG |
This article is part of a series on .38 caliber goodies | |
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Cartridges | .38 Long Colt (1875) | .38 S&W (1877) | .38 ACP (1900) | .38 Special (1902) | .380 ACP (1908) | .38/200 (1922) | .38 Super (1927) |
Revolvers | M1899 Revolver | Smith & Wesson M&P/Victory | Webley Mk IV | Enfield No. 2 Mk I | Colt Detective Special |
Pistols | Colt M1900 | Colt M1902 | Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammer | Colt M1908 Pocket Hammerless | Browning M1910 | Walther PPK | HK 4 |