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Re: Any of you geezers have a "woolworth 45"???



"Jim Bianchi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On 24 Nov 2003 21:12:33 -0800, Laura Bush - wrote:
> >They're a cheapie gun used in WW2. Supposedly the US made thousands of
> >them back then at a cost of $1.50 each (WW2 dollars). It was about
> >fist-sized and was a 45 caliber single shot that held a half dozen or
> >so cartridges in the grip. Each round had to be manually loaded. Gun
> >was once described as " a great gun for getting another gun."  I've
> >never seen one but they sound pretty cool and I wondered if there are
> >any still around.  I assume they're still legal.
>
> This was the 'Liberator' pistol. Other than the name, what you've
> said is correct. They were stamped out of sheet steel and air dropped into
> occupied France in WWII for posible use by the resistance. As you say, the
> grip held cartridges, a bit of dowel (which was used to extract the fired
> brass), and an instruction sheet that was mostly pictures so it could be
> understood by anyone. I've only seen photos of one, and it could only be
> called VERY crude -- it was essentially a gov't mftd .45 caliber zip gun.
> It had a smooth bore, the bbl was 'prox 4" long. Surviving examples are
> very much collectors items today.

It may have been crude, but with just one shot in the right place you could
pick up a nice Mauser or an MP-40, or maybe even a MG-32.





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