Guns

Top 5 Military Guns & Rifles of All Time

In no particular rank or order, I give you the five best U.S. military firearms of all time.

By Christian Orr, Former Air Force Security Officer

In no particular rank or order, I give you the five best U.S. military firearms of all time. Disagree? Let me know in the comments what you would have picked.

The M1 Garand

You dear readers undoubtedly saw this one coming a mile away. When no less a historic icon of military leadership than Gen. George S. Patton himself calls the M1 Garand “the greatest battle implement ever devised,” that oughta tell you something. Named for its inventor, John C. Garand, this weapon was officially adopted as the standard U.S. infantry rifle in 1936, thus becoming America’s first standard-issue autoloading rifle. The M1 replaced the bolt-action M1903 Springfield, but it retained the powerful .30-06 cartridge. The Garand served official duty for 22 years, during which time more than 5.4 million units were produced. In WWII and the Korean War alike, this battle rifle earned an unrivaled reputation for accuracy, power, ruggedness, and reliability.

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The M1911 .45 ACP Pistol

Another no-brainer here, right? Yes, I know, I penned a recent article questioning the hit-or-miss reliability of non-customized M1911s produced in the last few decades. But the military-issue M1911 and M1911-A1 .45s of the first half of the 20th century were indeed reliable pieces of hardware, which goes a long way in explaining why they remained the standard-issue U.S. Armed Forces pistol for 75 years (!!) before finally being superseded by the Beretta M9, an excellent firearm in its own right.

Legendary gunmaker John Moses Browning developed the pistol and the .45 ACP (Automatic Colt Pistol) cartridge in response to the Army’s desire for a semiautomatic handgun that offered greater stopping power than the M1892 .38 Long Colt revolver, which had been deemed inadequate against fanatical Moro warriors during the Philippine Insurrection of 1899-1902.

Mr. Browning’s invention first had to survive a grueling 6,000-round torture test. The gun did so with nary a single malfunction, and upon triggering that final shot of the field test, the firer is reported to have shouted out, “She made it, by God!” From there, arguably the single most famous wartime usage of “The Army Automatic” occurred during WWI, when Sgt. Alvin York used his .45 auto to drop seven charging German soldiers with seven shots.

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Kimber LAPD SIS M1911-A1 .45 Caliber Pistol. Image Credit: YouTube Screenshot.

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As a postscript, even though the M1911 is no longer the U.S. military’s general-issue sidearm, she remains in service to this very day with the door-kickers of the Marine Expeditionary Unit Special Operations Command (MEUSOC).

The Kentucky Rifle

Since we’re talking “of all time” here, why not harken back to a gun from our War of Independence? The Kentucky Rifle was the first truly American firearm, though it was too expensive to produce for general issue to the Continental Army, which primarily used the same “Brown Bess” musket as their British Redcoat adversaries. For those comparatively few American sharpshooters who did wield the Kentucky Rifle, it was a game changer. The British soon dubbed the weapon “the widow-maker” for the high death toll it inflicted on their officer corps.

As historian Dallas Bogan explains, “The Kentucky Long Rifle was more accurate than any known previous firearm, and it soon became famous with a flight being deadly at over 200 yards, which was an astonishing range at that time.” By contrast, the Brown Bess only had a practical effective range of 50 yards.

Colt Single Action Army “Peacemaker”

The term “Colt .45” is one of the most ubiquitous in the world of small-arms jargon, and it’s a label could just as easily be applied to the aforementioned M1911, even though Colt was far from the only producer, or the gun that preceded that autopistol by 38 years, the Colt Single Action Army revolver, AKA the “Peacemaker.” This Peacemaker employed the .45 Long Colt cartridge, which, as noted by firearms historian Mike “Duke” Venturino, “was intended not only to knock down human adversaries but also for putting their horses out of commission.”

Officially, the Colt SAA served as the U.S. Army sidearm from 1873 to 1892, most famously at Custer’s Last Stand. Unofficially, the gun stuck around much longer than that, seeing action during the Spanish-American War, and contributing George Patton’s flamboyant ivory-handled specimen, which he first wielded in combat during the Pancho Villa Expedition of 1916.

M1903 Springfield

What goes around comes around. The M1903 Springfield that we mentioned earlier as the immediate processor of the M1 Garand was also a rightful legend. As the official standard U.S. service rifle from 1903 to 1936, this gun served the American doughboys in the trenches of The Great War. It continued to see action, both as an infantry rifle during WWII, and as a sniper rifle – again during WWII, and later in Korea and Vietnam. Continuing sales via the Civilian Marksmanship Program (CMP) are a testament to its enduring popularity.

Camouflaged M1903 Springfield sniper’s rifle with Warner & Swasey telescopic sight, in France, May 1918.

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