The PEDERSEN
DEVICE | ARCHIVES
AT
THE TIME OF THE UNITED STATES active
involvement in World War I, the M1903 rifle
was the nations standard military service
rifle. The U.S. M1917 Enfield rifle was soon
adopted to supplement the supply of M1903s,
and both were issued to and used by our Doughboys
in large numbers during the war. While the
M1903 and M1917 were reliable, accurate, and
powerful, they shared two drawbacks in common
with all bolt-action military service rifles;
the mechanism was slow to operate and the standard
cartridge was overly powerful for some combat
applications. These issues were discussed in
an issue of Army Ordnance magazine:
It may seem at first glance that the
military rifle cartridge is unduly powerful
but it must be remembered that this cartridge
is intended to be used against various targets
such as airplanes, armored cars, tanks, etc.
These same bullets are used by machine
guns for laying out barrages at long distances
or for shooting at high flying aircraft.
Thus a soldier in firing his army rifle
is frequently in a situation where he has more
power in his bullets than he needs for a particular
job in hand; moreover for each shot he must
open the bolt of his gun and throw out the
empty cartridge and then close the bolt and
lock it before he can shoot another shot.
In other words, it was not always necessary
that a soldier have a full-power cartridge,
but there were times when such cartridges were
indispensable. Also, a self-loading or semi-automatic
rifle would have been quite desirable, but
no satisfactory arms of this type capable of
handling full-power military cartridges were
available. A reasonable solution to these seemingly
contradictory problems seemed quite unlikely.
However, an innovative and technologically
imaginative mechanism was developed to address
the situation. The resulting mechanism is termed
the Pedersen Device.
This device was conceived in the fertile mind
of John D. Pedersen who was a talented and
well-known arms designer during that period.
Pedersen had previously designed several commercially
successfully arms including the Remington Model
10 slide-action shotgun and the Model 51 autoloading
pistol. Pedersen did most of his experimental
and developmental work while affiliated with
the Remington Arms Co. In the late 1920s and
early 1930s Pedersen developed a semi-automatic
service rifle that was a serious competitor
to the rifle designed by John Garand that was
subsequently adopted as the M1.
Pedersen labored at his new invention until the
summer of 1917 when he contacted the U.S. Army
Ordnance Department to request a secret demonstration
of the fruits of his labor. Although the Ordnance
people had no idea as to the nature of his
invention, Pedersens reputation and standing
in the ordnance community was such that his
request was soon granted. On October 8, 1917,
Chief of Ordnance General William Crozier,
along with a specially selected group of army
officers and congressmen all sworn to secrecy,
assembled at the Congress Heights rifle range
in Washington, D.C. The following details of
the demonstration were related a number of
years later in an issue of Army Ordnance magazine:
Mr. Pedersen started his demonstration
by firing the Springfield rifle which he brought
with him. After firing a few shots in the ordinary
way he suddenly jerked the bolt out of the
rifle and dropped it into a pouch which he
had with him, and from a long scabbard which
was on his belt he produced a mysterious looking
piece of mechanism which he quickly slid into
the rifle in place of the bolt, locking the
device to the rifle by turning a catch provided
for the purpose. Then he snapped into place
a long black magazine containing forty small
pistol size cartridges whose bullets were,
however, of the right diameter to fit the barrel
of the rifle. All this was done in an instant
and in another instant Mr. Pedersen was pulling
the trigger of the rifle time after time as
fast as he could work his finger and each time
he pulled the trigger the rifle fired a shot,
threw out the empty cartridge and reloaded
itself.
The assembled onlookers were amazed by Pedersens
demonstration, and the device was eagerly examined
at length. The mechanism was termed by Pedersen
as an automatic bolt that allowed
the Springfield rifle to be fired semi-automatically.
It eventually became known as the Pedersen
Device. The device operated in much the
same manner as a blowback-operated pistol.
The barrel of the device was the
same configuration as a .30-06 Sprg.
cartridge and was rifled (with shallow lands
and grooves).
The device locked into the rifle by means of
the magazine cut-off that was slightly modified.
A small projection on the rifles trigger
moved forward each time the trigger was pulled,
which tripped the devices sear. Therefore,
each time the rifles trigger was pulled,
the device fired. None of the minor modifications
to the rifle prevented it from firing .30-06
cartridges with the standard bolt inserted.
A 40-round-capacity box magazine was attached
to the right side of the device and held in
place by two spring-loaded fingers.
The magazine was inserted at about a 45 degree
angle, which allowed the standard rifle sights
to be used. Fired cartridge cases were ejected
through an oval opening milled into the left
side of the rifles receiver. The cartridge
resembled a rimless, extra-long .32 ACP pistol
round but differed a bit in size and ballistic
performance. The round was .30 caliber so as
to be compatible with the 03s bore
and was loaded with approximately 3.5 grs.
of smokeless powder. When fired through an
03, the muzzle velocity of the 80-gr.
FMJ bullet was about 1300 f.p.s. with a muzzle
energy of approximately -300 ft.-lbs.nearly
50 percent greater than comparable rounds fired
from a handgun.
The device was to be carried in a stamped,
sheet metal scabbard, and the standard 03
bolt was to be contained in a canvas pouch
when it was removed from the rifle. Five Pedersen
Device magazines were carried in a five-cell
canvas pouch. The metal scabbard and both types
of canvas pouches were designed to be attached
to the standard infantry cartridge belt. The
device, complete with its metal carrying scabbard,
weighed about 2 lbs., 2 ozs., and one fully
loaded magazine weighed about 1 lb.
Those who witnessed Pedersens demonstration,
especially the military observers, quickly
grasped the potential significance of the device.
There was a great deal of concern in the United
States at the time regarding new and innovative
arms that might help save American lives in
the trench warfare environment being encountered
by our troops in France. It was believed that
the Pedersen Device could be an enormous asset
for both offensive and defensive purposes.
An ordnance officer made the following observations
regarding the Pedersen Devices defensive
role:
As the enemy came charging across
No Mans Land each of our soldiers would
start firing with this miniature machine gun
and the entire zone in front of the trenches
would be covered with such a whirlwind of fire
that no attack could survive ... . The
same officer had equally high expectations
of the Pedersen devices performance as
an offensive arm: [A] line of soldiers
advancing across No Mans Land firing
this device at the enemy trenches as they ran
would make it extremely difficult for anyone
in the trenches to show his head or any part
of his body. Of course, fire while running
or walking would not be so accurate, but the
tremendous number of shots would more than
make up for any inaccuracies and the whole
enemy trench system would presumably be smothered
with a storm of bullets.
The War Department was sufficiently impressed
with the preliminary demonstration of the device
to order an ordnance officer, Captain J.C.
Beatty, to France in November 1917 to deliver
an example of the Pedersen Device to General
Pershing. Captain Beatty was sworn to secrecy
and the entire project was cloaked with a Top
Secret status.
A board was convened by General Pershing on
December 9, 1917, at Langres, France, to evaluate
the secret weapon. The board consisted
of four high-ranking U.S. Army officers accompanied
by Captain Beatty. The board supervised testing
of the device for accuracy, penetration, rapidity
of fire and endurance. After the initial testing,
the board agreed that the device could be of
great value for both offensive and defensive
use. General Pershing was favorably impressed
with the Pedersen Device and dictated the following
confidential memorandum dated December 11,
1917:
For the Chief of Staff and Chief of
Ordnance. Board recommends adoption of Pedersen
attachment for rifle and the initial purchase
of 100,000 of same. Great secrecy urged in
connection with this device. Initial supply
of ammunition 5,000 rounds per gun with daily
supply of 100 rounds per gun. Strongly approve
of device and believe it will materially increase
efficiency of our infantry. Pershing
General Pershing followed the first memo
with a subsequent memo that stated: Desire
25,000 Pedersen attachments be held in reserve.
Replacements 50% per year on devices and 200%
on magazines. Request 40 magazines be shipped
with each device. When will shipments be made?
Pershing
General Pershings strong approval
of the Pedersen Device made the boards
recommendation for adoption a foregone conclusion
and paved the way for it to go into production.
When the Pedersen Device was officially adopted,
it was given the purposely misleading nomenclature
of Automatic Pistol, Caliber .30, Model
of 1918 in order to maintain the desired
secrecy. It is amusing to note that the War
Department was criticized in some circles for
adopting a new pistol, especially a puny .30-caliber
pistol, when the standard M1911 .45 pistol
performed so well!
The initial order for 100,000 Pedersen Devices
was placed with Remington Arms Co. on March
26, 1918. The company was to receive a net
profit of $2.00 per device and 3 cents per
magazine. John Pedersen was paid $50,000 for
the rights to his device along with a royalty
of 50 cents for each one manufactured. The
government paid for all necessary machinery
and equipment required by Remington to produce
the Pedersen Device. The initial order for
100,000 was soon increased to 133,450.
On May 24, 1918, Remington was granted a contract
to produced 800 million Pedersen Device cartridges.
The cartridges were head-stamped RA
or RAH and dated with the last
two digits of the year of production (18,
19 and 20 have been
observed). The RAH head-stamped
cartridges are believed to have been produced
at the Remington plant in Hoboken, N.J. The
cartridges were packed in 40-round boxes, thus
each box would fill one magazine. Five boxes
were packed in a 200-round carton and three
cartons (600 rounds) were carried in a light
canvas bandolier. Five bandoliers were packed
in a wooden crate.
Production of the Pedersen Device magazines
was reportedly subcontracted to the firm of
Mt. Vernon Silversmiths with some components
further subcontracted to the Gorham Company.
The magazines were constructed with viewing
slots (facing the firer) so that the number
of rounds remaining could be easily determined.
Five magazines were carried in a web pouch
and two or three pouches could be carried on
the standard infantry cartridge belt. The pouches
were fabricated by Rock Island Arsenal and
stamped with the date of production. A canvas
pouch designed to hang vertically from the
belt was also produced to carry the rifles
bolt when removed from the rifle. Two stamped
sheet metal wrenches were to be issued with
each device for adjustment and disassembly
purposes. The stamped metal scabbards were
reportedly manufactured by the Gorham Company.
The unmarked scabbards were fitted with cartridge
belt hooks and had a hinged top with a wire
closing latch.
As Remington began to tool up for manufacture
of the Pedersen Devices, Springfield Armory
was directed to begin production of a modified
M1903 rifle to be desig-nated as the U.S.
Rifle, Caliber .30, Model of 1903, Mark I.
The Mark I rifle differed from standard M1903
rifle of the period in several respects. These
included the ejection port milled into the
left side of the receiver, a slightly cut-away
section in the stock under the port to provide
clearance and a modified sear, trigger and
magazine cut-off. The Mark I marking
was added to the receiver ring. None of the
modifications of the Mark I rifle affected
firing in the normal manner with the service
cartridge (.30-06) when the standard
bolt was inserted.
As Remington and Springfield labored
on getting the Pedersen Devices and M1903 Mark
I rifles into production, the War Department
was busily formulating plans on how to best
utilize the new secret weapon in
combat overseas. It was envisioned that the
Pedersen Device would play a large role in
the massive Grand Offensive planned
for the Spring of 1919 where it could conceivably
be of great value. However, it soon became
apparent that production of the M1903 Mark
I rifles would not be sufficient to meet this
time frame. To this end, John Pedersen was
requested to develop a version of his device
for use with the M1917 rifle since it was being
produced in much larger numbers than the M1903.
The variant made for the M1917 rifle was designated
as the Automatic Pistol, Caliber .30,
Mark II. After preliminary testing, Remington
was given a contract for the production of
500,000 Mark II Pedersen Devices to take effect
when the original Mark I Pedersen Device contract
was completed.
It is interesting to note that Remington also
fabricated at least one prototype Pedersen
Device for the Russian Moisin-Nagant rifle,
which was based on the same design premise
as the Mark I device but differed in some details.
The fall of the Czarist government in Russia
resulted in the cancellation of any potential
Moisin-Nagant/Pedersen Device program. Reportedly,
Remington also contemplated the production
of a Pedersen Device for the French Berthier
rifle, but it is not known if any were actually
fabricated. Both the Mosin-Nagant and Berthier
rifles were made during World War I under foreign
contract by Remington.
The Mark I Pedersen Devices and M1903 Mark
I Springfield rifle were beginning to come
off the assembly lines when the Armistice was
declared on November 11, 1918. The pending
contract for Mark II Devices was soon cancelled
with only a very few prototypes (likely less
than a half dozen) being essentially hand-made
by Remington. Production of the Mark I Pedersen
Device continued until March 1, 1919 when that
contract was also cancelled. By this time,
some 65,000 Devices had been manufactured along
with 1,600,000 magazines, 65,000,000 cartridges
and the metal scabbards and canvas pouches.
The War Department had the Pedersen Devices
but was not sure what to do with them since
the war ended. Another ordnance board was convened
to ascertain the Pedersen Devices future
role, if any, and to make appropriate recommendations.
Tests were conducted in France soon after the
conclusion of the war and subsequently in the
United States at Fort Benning in 1919 and Fort
Riley in 1920. In addition, some 4,000 M1903
Mark I rifles complete with Pedersen Devices
were sent to Panama Canal Zone in 1920 for
further field testing. All of the various tests
came to the same basic conclusion: that the
Pedersen Device was unlikely to be of use in
future wars. The low power of the cartridge,
the added weight of the Device and related
gear and the cumbersome changing back and forth
between the rifle bolt and the device were
all cited as deficiencies. The Pedersen Devices
that were issued for testing were returned
to Springfield Armory until their fate could
be determined. Although the Pedersen Devices
secret status was maintained after
the war, it eventually became apparent that
the mechanism was never going to be utilized
by the U.S. Army.
With no prospect for future use, it was decided
in April 1931 to destroy all devices, magazines
and ammunition in order to save the cost of
continued storage. The devices and accessories
were to be burned and disposed of as scrap
metal at several selected ordnance facilities.
It has been reported that some Pedersen Devices
destroyed at the San Antonio Arsenal (Texas)
were broken up and dumped for use as rebar
into concrete sidewalks being poured at the
time.
Beginning in 1937, the M1903 Mark I rifles
were recalled to Springfield Armory for conversion
to M1903 configuration by removing the special
Mark I parts and replacing them with standard
M1903 components. It is reported that many
of the converted M1903 Mark I rifles were subsequently
issued to National Guard units. The Mark
I designation on the receiver ring and
the unusual ejection port milled into the receiver
were likely a mystery to the soldiers who were
issued the rifles since few had ever heard
of a Pedersen Device due to its secret
status. Virtually all of the M1903 Mark I rifles
were eventually rebuilt by a number of ordnance
facilities.
Except for a few given to museums and government
reference collections, virtually all of the
Pedersen Devices were destroyed except for
a small number that were slipped into coat
pockets, lunch boxes or otherwise surreptitiously
removed from the destruction sites. Surviving
examples of Pedersen Devices are rare and desirable
collector items today. A number of specimens
will show evidence of having been burned, which
indicates they were likely retrieved from the
edges of the destruction bonfires.
Some partially complete devices assembled from
miscellaneous parts may also be encountered
today. The metal carrying scabbards are even
rarer than the Devices, and the magazines are
quite uncommon as well. Some ammunition survived
as the 40-round boxes are not extremely hard
to find today, although the 200-round cartons
and canvas bandoliers are rather rare. The
related web gear was apparently sold as surplus
as the canvas bolt pouches are not too difficult
to turn up today, and the five-cell magazine
pouches are very common and inexpensive. The
precise number of Pedersen Devices extant is
not known and estimates range from a few dozen
to perhaps 100, and condition ranges from pristine
examples to burnt-out relics.
Even though it was never fired in anger and
its tactical wisdom can be debated, the Pedersen
Device is nevertheless a tribute to the genius
of John Pedersen. It remains one of the most
interesting and innovative items of military
ordnance ever designed and put into production.
It is too bad that the Pedersen Device never
had the opportunity to demonstrate what it
might have been able to accomplish on the battlefield.
Today, it is a little-known but thoroughly
fascinating footnote to United States ordnance
history.
Excerpted in part from U.S. Infantry Weapons
of the First World War by Bruce N. Canfield,
Andrew Mowbray Publishers, Inc., 2000; www.manatarmsbookshelf.com.
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