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Chauchat

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French automatic rifle/Light machine gun

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Chauchat
TypeAutomatic rifle/Light machine gun
Place of originFrance
Service history
In service1915–1948
Used bySeeUsers
Wars
Production history
DesignerLouis Chauchat and Charles Sutter
Designed1907
ManufacturerGladiator
SIDARME
Produced1915–1922
No. builtApprox. 262,000
Variants
  • Chauchat Mle 1918 (US)
  • Wz 15/27 (Poland)
  • FM 15/27 (Belgium)
Specifications
Mass9.07 kg (20.0 lb)
Length1,143 millimeters (45.0 in)
Barrel length470 millimeters (19 in)

Cartridge
ActionLong recoil withgas assist
Rate of fire240 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity630 metres per second (2,100 ft/s)
Effective firing range200 metres (220 yd)
Maximum firing range2,000 metres (2,200 yd)
Feed system20-round semi-circle magazine (usually only loaded to 16–19 rounds);20-round curved box magazine (Belgian Variant)
SightsIron sights

TheChauchat ("show-sha",French pronunciation:[ʃoʃa]) was the standardlight machine gun or "machine rifle" of theFrench Army duringWorld War I (1914–18). Its official designation was "Fusil Mitrailleur Modele 1915 CSRG" ("Machine Rifle Model 1915 CSRG"). Beginning in June 1916, it was placed into regular service with French infantry, where the troops called it theFM Chauchat, after Colonel Louis Chauchat, the main contributor to its design. The Chauchat in8mm Lebel was also extensively used in 1917–18 by theAmerican Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.), where it was officially designated as the "Automatic Rifle, Model 1915 (Chauchat)". A total of 262,000 Chauchats were manufactured between December 1915 and November 1918, including 244,000 chambered for the8mm Lebel service cartridge, making it the most widely manufactured automatic weapon of World War I. The armies of eight other nations—Belgium, Finland, Greece, Italy, Poland, Romania, Russia, and Serbia—also used the Chauchat machine rifle in fairly large numbers during and after World War I.

The Chauchat was one of the first light, automatic rifle-caliber weapons designed to be carried and fired by a single operator and an assistant, without a heavy tripod or a team of gunners. It set a precedent for several subsequent 20th-century firearm projects, being a portable, yet full-power automatic weapon built inexpensively and in very large numbers.[citation needed] The Chauchat combined apistol grip, an in-linestock, a detachablemagazine, and aselective fire capability in a compact package of manageable weight (20 pounds, 9 kilograms) for a single soldier. Furthermore, it could be routinely fired from the hip and while walking (marching fire). The Chauchat is the only mass produced fully-automatic weapon actuated bylong recoil, a Browning-designed system already applied in 1906 to theRemington Model 8 semi-automatic rifle: extraction and ejection of the empties takes place when the barrel returns forward, while the bolt is retained in the rear position. Afterwards the barrel trips a lever which releases the bolt and allows it to chamber another round.

The muddy trenches of northern France exposed a number of weaknesses in the Chauchat's design. Construction had been simplified to facilitate mass production, resulting in low quality of many metal parts. The magazines in particular were the cause of about 75% of the stoppages or cessations of fire; they were made of thin metal and open on one side, allowing for the entry of mud and dust. The weapon also ceased to function when overheated, the barrel sleeve remaining in the retracted position until the gun had cooled off. Consequently, in September 1918, barely two months before the Armistice of November 11, the A.E.F. in France had already initiated the process of replacing the Chauchat with theM1918 Browning Automatic Rifle. Shortly after World War I, the French army replaced the Chauchat with the new gas-operatedMle 1924 light machine gun. It was mass manufactured during World War I by two reconverted civilian plants: "Gladiator" and "Sidarme". Besides the 8mm Lebel version, the Chauchat machine rifle was also manufactured in U.S..30-06 Springfield and in7.65×53mm Argentine Mauser caliber to arm theAmerican Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) and theBelgian Army, respectively. The Belgian military did not experience difficulties with their Chauchats in 7.65mm Mauser and kept them in service into the early 1930s, as did thePolish Army. Conversely, the Chauchat version in U.S. .30-06 made by "Gladiator" for the A.E.F., the Model 1918, proved to be fundamentally defective and had to be withdrawn from service. The Chauchat has a poor reputation in some quarters; the .30-06 version in particular is by some experts considered the worst machine gun ever fielded.[2][3][4]

History

[edit]

The design of the Chauchat dates back to 1903, and itslong recoil operation is based on theJohn Browning-designedRemington Model 8semi-automatic rifle of 1906, not (as so often repeated in the past) on the later designs (1910) ofRudolf Frommer, the Hungarian inventor of the commercialFrommer Stop pistol.[5] The Chauchat machine rifle project was initiated between 1903 and 1910 in a French Army weapon research facility located near Paris:Atelier de Construction de Puteaux (APX). This development was aiming at creating a very light, portable automatic weapon served by one man only,[6] yet firing the8 mm Lebel service ammunition. The project was led from the beginning by Colonel Louis Chauchat, a graduate fromEcole Polytechnique, assisted by senior armorer Charles Sutter. Not less than eight trial prototypes were tested at APX, between 1903 and 1909. As a result, a small series (100 guns) of 8 mm Lebel CS (Chauchat-Sutter) machine rifles was ordered in 1911, then manufactured between 1913 and 1914 byManufacture d'armes de Saint-Étienne (MAS). Because they were light, they were used temporarily during the early part of World War I to arm observation crews on French military aircraft.[7] Only one CS machine rifle is known to have survived in a Prague museum.[8]

In 1914, when World War I broke out, French troops did not operate any light machine gun. It was clear that this type of weapon had become indispensable in modern warfare, because of the increase in firepower it could provide to an infantry section. Spurred by GeneralJoseph Joffre, it was decided to adopt the Chauchat, above all else because the pre-war CS (Chauchat-Sutter) machine rifle was already in existence, thoroughly tested, and designed to fire the 8mm Lebel service ammunition.[7] Furthermore, due to its projected low manufacturing costs and relative simplicity, the newly adopted (1915) CSRG machine rifle could be mass-produced by a converted peacetime industrial plant. The term CSRG is made up of the initials of Chauchat, Sutter, Ribeyrolles and Gladiator,[6] the respective manufacturers. Paul Ribeyrolles was the general manager of the Gladiator company, a peacetime manufacturer of motor cars, motorcycles, and bicycles located in Pre-Saint-Gervais (a northern suburb of Paris). The fairly large Gladiator factory was thus converted into an arms manufacturer in 1915 and became the principal industrial producer of Chauchat machine rifles during World War I. Later on, in 1918, a subsidiary ofCompagnie des forges et acieries de la marine et d'Homecourt named SIDARME and located inSaint-Chamond, Loire, also participated in the mass manufacture of CSRGs.

Design details

[edit]
This sectionis missing information about magazine design and feeding mechanism. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on thetalk page.(July 2024)
Bolt of the Chauchat machine gun.

The Chauchat machine rifle or "automatic rifle" functioned on thelong barrel recoil principle with agas assist.

The Chauchat machine rifle (CSRG) delivered to theFrench Army fired the 8mm Lebel cartridge at the slow rate of 240rounds per minute. At 9 kilograms (20 lb), the gun was much lighter than the contemporary portable light machine guns of the period, such as the 12-kilogram (26 lb)Hotchkiss M1909 Benét–Mercié machine gun and the 13-kilogram (29 lb)Lewis gun. It was aselective fire weapon, either on automatic or semi-automatic mode.

The Chauchat's construction was a mix of new, high quality components, re-used parts proven in other designs, and the shoddy and sub standard. This combination did not help in the reliability of the weapon. The recoiling barrel sleeve, as well as all the bolt moving parts, were precision milled from solid steel and always fully interchangeable. The barrels were standardLebel rifle barrels that had been shortened from the muzzle end. The barrel radiators were made of ribbed cast aluminum. On the other hand, the outer breech housing was a simple tube, and the rest of the gun was built of stamped metal plates of mediocre quality. Side plate assemblies were held by screws that could become loose after prolonged firings. The sights were always misaligned on the Gladiator-made guns, creating severe aiming problems that had to be corrected by the gunners.

The exact number on record of Chauchat machine rifles manufactured between 1916 and the end of 1918 is 262,300. The Gladiator factory manufactured 225,700 CSRGs in 8 mm Lebel plus 19,000[6] in the U.S. caliber .30-06 between April 1916 and November 1918. SIDARME manufactured 18,600 CSRGs, exclusively in 8mm Lebel, between October 1917 and November 1918. The SIDARME-manufactured Chauchats were generally better finished and better functioning than those made by Gladiator. The French Army had a stock of 63,000 CSRG's just before the Armistice.

The French military at the time considered the Chauchat's performance as inferior in comparison to the reliable heavyHotchkiss M1914 machine gun. However, whereas the Hotchkiss was a weighty, tripod-mounted weapon, the Chauchat was a light, portable gun that could be mass-produced quickly, cheaply, and in very large numbers. It was also never intended to take the role of static defense of the heavy machine gun. On the contrary, it was designed to be a light, thus highly portable, automatic weapon that would increase the firepower of infantry squads while they progressed forward during assaults. A significant plus is that it could easily be fired while walking (marching fire),[7] by hanging the Chauchat's sling over a shoulder hook located onto the gunner's upper left side of his Y–strap.

The CSRG 1915 Chauchat was operated withBalle D 8mm ammunition, which was standard for the French until 1932 when they went to an improvedBalle N 8mm Lebel cartridge. The Chauchats, as they were retired, were not converted to theBalle N, and as a result, they do not operate well with theBalle N cartridge (French World War I weapons converted toBalle N will have a noticeable "N" markings). OnlyBalle D 8mm should be used in the Chauchat 1915. The quickest way to identify the different cartridge is that theBalle D bullet is brass colored while theBalle N is a shiny silver.[citation needed]

Service

[edit]
French soldiers with an FM Chauchat, Somme, 1918.

The Mle 1915 Chauchat's performance on the battlefield drew decidedly mixed reviews from the users when the war was stagnating in the mud of the trenches in 1916. This brought about a survey,regiment by regiment, requested byGeneral Pétain in late 1916; the survey's essential conclusion was that the open-sided half-moonmagazines were defective and caused about two thirds of all stoppages. For instance, it was a common practice for the gunners to oil up the inside of the magazines to facilitate movement of the 8mm Lebel rounds. Also, loose earth, grit, and other particles easily entered the gun through these open-sided magazines, an ever-present risk in the muddy environment of the trenches. An insistence on using only good, undeformed magazines with strong springs was the most practical solution to this problem. Chauchat gunners were also known to load their magazines with 18 or 19 rounds, instead of the maximum 20, in order to avoid the dreaded first-round failure to feed. The Chauchat's long recoil system is often cited as a source of excessive stress on the gunner when firing, though recent and extensive firing tests have demonstrated that it is the Chauchat's ergonomics and its loose bipod, rather than its recoil, that makes it a difficult gun to keep on target beyond very short bursts. On most of the Gladiator-made guns, the sights also made the Chauchat shoot systematically too low and to the right, a failing which was soon recognized but never corrected. Overheating during uninterrupted periods of full automatic fire (about 120 rounds with the 8mm Lebel version) often resulted in the barrel sleeve assembly locking in the rear position due tothermal expansion, causing stoppage of fire until the gun had cooled off. Hence, French andUS Army manuals recommended firing in short bursts or semi-auto. In 1918, the A.E.F. officially labeled the Chauchat in its user manuals as an "automatic rifle", a product of mistranslation of the term"Fusil Mitrailleur", instead of "Machine Gun Rifle", a more accurate description.

American service

[edit]

While rate of fire restrictions (250 rounds/minute) made the gun manageable in its 8mm Lebel version, the U.S. .30-06 version fired more powerful cartridges that exacerbated the problems of overheating. Furthermore, the 18,000 Chauchats in .30-06 delivered to the A.E.F. were not conversions of the French model. Rather, they were newly manufactured guns which had been delivered directly to the A.E.F. by the Gladiator factory. As documented from the original American and French military archives, most of these Mle 1918 Chauchats in .30-06 were flawed from the beginning due to incomplete chamber reaming and other dimensional defects acquired during the manufacturing process at the Gladiator factory. Very few .30-06 Chauchats reached the front lines of northern France; however, when they did, it was reportedly not uncommon for U.S. units to simply discard their Chauchats in favor ofM1903 Springfield rifles and cease to function as an auto-rifle squad altogether.[9] Whereas instruction manuals in both French and English for the 8mm Lebel Chauchat are still commonly found today, instruction manuals for the US 30-06 "American Chauchat" have never been seen in U.S. and French military archives or in private collections.

Chauchat in American service

[edit]
Two soldiers are warmly greeted by civilians – and elderly woman and man. A parked ambulance is behind them
Soldiers of the American308th and 166th Infantry Regiments liberate a French town in 1918. The soldier on the left is carrying a Chauchat slung over his shoulder.

After the United States entered World War I in April 1917, theAmerican Expeditionary Forces (AEF) arrived in France without automatic weapons orfield artillery. Consequently, it turned to its French ally to purchase ordnance. General Pershing chose theHotchkiss M1914 machine gun and the Chauchat machine rifle (designated as "Automatic Rifle, Model 1915 (Chauchat)" by the AEF and nicknamed the "Sho-Sho" by the troops) to equip U.S. infantry. Between August 1917 and the November 11, 1918Armistice with Germany, the Gladiator factory delivered to the AEF 16,000 Chauchats in 8 mm Lebel and, late in 1918, 19,000 Chauchats in .30-06.[6]

While the performance of the M1915 Chauchat in 8 mm Lebel was combat-effective, judging by the numbers of decorated U.S. Chauchat gunners found in the U.S. Divisional Histories, the performance of the M1918 Chauchat in .30-06 was soon recognized as abysmal (and in large part the reason for the gun's bad reputation). The most common problem was a failure to extract after the gun had fired only a few rounds and became slightly hot. A modern-day test firing of the M1918 .30-06 Chauchat was performed atAberdeen Proving Grounds in July 1973, but no particular problem was described in the official report, which is accessible on open file. Conversely, an exhaustive firing test of the M1918 Chauchat in .30-06 was also carried out in 1994 near Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, by R. Keller and W. Garofalo. Their testing, which is reported in "The Chauchat Machine Rifle" volume, did expose severe extraction problems caused by incorrect chamber measurements and other substandard manufacturing. During World War I, in 1918, the preserved U.S. archival record also documents that American inspectors at the Gladiator factory had rejected about 40% of the .30-06 Chauchat production,[6] while the remaining 60% proved problematic when they reached the front lines. Supplies of the newly manufactured and superiorM1918 Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) were allocated sparingly and only very late, during theMeuse-Argonne offensive, which began in late September 1918. Therefore, about 75% of the U.S. Divisions were still equipped with the Chauchat – in its original French M1915 version in 8 mm Lebel – at the time of the Armistice of November 11, 1918. It is also well documented that General Pershing had been holding back on the BAR until victory was certain, for fear it would be copied by Germany.[10] However, it is also known that the very first BARs delivered had improperly tempered recoil springs, and had these guns been prematurely introduced during the summer of 1918, their employment may also have been problematic. One of the most significant accounts of the Chauchat's poor performance was from then-lieutenantLemuel Shepherd, who was quoted saying:

I spent the last few weeks [of World War I] back in the hospital, but I'll tell you one thing the boys later told me: The dayafter the Armistice they got the word to turn in their Chauchats and draw Browning Automatic Rifles. That BAR was so much better than that damned Chauchat. If we'd only had the BAR six months before, it would have saved so many lives.[11]

As documented by World War I veteran Laurence Stallings (inThe Doughboys, 1963) and by U.S. Divisional Histories, theMedal of Honor was awarded to three American Chauchat gunners in 1918:[12]

  1. PrivateNels Wold (35th Division, 138th Infantry,KIA, posthumous)
  2. PrivateFrank Bart (2nd Division, 9th Infantry)
  3. PrivateThomas C. Neibaur (42nd Division, 107th Infantry)

Improvements

[edit]

Several prototypes of dirt-proof, fully enclosed Chauchat magazines were successfully tested in May and June 1918, but came too late to be placed into service. Stronger open-sided standard magazines, as well as tailored canvas gun covers protecting the gun against mud during transport, had previously been issued in late 1917; as well as a flash hider. The initial two-man Chauchat team was considered effective and grew to a four-man squad by October 1917 (the squad leader, the gunner, the first ammo bearer who handled the magazines plus one additional ammo bearer). Both the gunner and the assistant gunner (pourvoyeur, ammo bearer) carried at all times a.32 ACPRuby pistol with three magazines, each one loaded with 9 rounds, as part of their regular equipment. The squad leader and the magazine carrier were both equipped with a rifle or with aBerthier carbine. The additional men provided assistance in carrying loaded magazines, helping manage malfunctions, and protecting the gunner, but mainly to carry more ammunition; thus boosting the combat load. This is still the basic layout of a modern infantry squad or fire-team, with the suppressive fire as the center of its combat formations.

French Chauchat gunner (left) and VB grenade launcher (right), 1918.

Tactical Innovation

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The French infantry section/platoon took its modern form in the years 1916-1918. It was then equipped with six portable light machine guns (Chauchat) and four to six rifle grenade launchers (VB rifle grenade) and itsvoltigeurs started being equipped with semi-automatic rifles, some with scopes. This differentiation induces an interdependence of the men which increases the psychological resistance superior to that of the aligned bayonet-men of 1914. Above all, the infantry platoon can maneuver other than in line, as an articulated unit at intervals thanks to its autonomous combat groups. The qualitative leap in a few years is enormous and modern squads and platoons still function in the same manner, albeit with more sophisticated equipment such as portable radios and night vision devices.

A specially lightened assault order was introduced in June 1915. The pack was now to be left behind in the second line; instead, rations and spare ammunition were rolled up in a blanket and worn bandolier-style. Steel helmets were standard for the infantry in September 1915, in time for the Champagne offensive;[13] standard issue for other arms occurred in October. Experience at Verdun showed how difficult it was to keep men in the front lines supplied with fresh water, so every man was given a second water bottle and a second haversack to carry necessities for a day or two of unsupported fighting; plus two gas masks (one in the ready position, one in a tin box); tools like an M1909 folding pick/shovel; extra ammunition and grenades, and sandbags for consolidating the objective.[14][15]

The rifle grenadiers and bombers (hand grenadiers) each carried a special haversack, which held the grenades in individual pouches inside. The rifle grenade cup was carried in its own pouch attached to the user's waistbelt. The men of the new fire and support teams were given new equipment for their spare ammunition. The Chauchat gunners each wore semi-circular pouches on the waistbelt, containing one spare magazine each, as well as a pack containing a further eight magazines and 64 loose rounds, and a haversack containing a further four magazines. Riflemen would be discouraged to fire, as this slowed the advance, their job was to leapfrog while being covered; firing by the platoon and half-platoon was only permitted to cover its own advance or that of a neighbouring platoon, or to deal with enemy pockets on their way.

The principal role of the Chauchat was to provide a mobile barrage during the advance. This required skilled teamwork on the part of the crew, changing the magazines while on the move to keep up the volume of fire. As the center of the tactical device, the Chauchat gunner (tireur) would expect casualties - but also decorations:

"Soldat Carpentier, 20e RI, near Nogentel, Oise, 31 August 1918... he advanced on the enemy, firing while walking, the rest of the platoon led by Sergeant Berthault. He succeed in maneuvering around the flank of an island of resistance and in capturing, with his comrades, four machine guns and twenty-five German gunners".[16]

Carpentier was awarded theCroix de Guerre with palm.

By 1916, French Army tactical methods started emphasizing concentrated firepower and the flexible use of infantry. The experience of Verdun would carry to the Somme, and French units were successful in capturing their objectives at the beginning of the offensive, as well as suffering less casualties.

From October 1917 the platoon had two LMG/rifle-grenadier sections, one hand grenade section and one rifle section. This new system would fight the Battle of La Malmaison, from 23 to 27 October, with the French interarms infantry beating back enemy attacks where the German infantry attackeden masse, shoulder to shoulder. At the same battle, General Franchet d'Espèrey the commander of 6th Army, successfully introduced specially trained squads of infantry whose role was to accompany the tanks (chars d'assaut, as they were called). In a series of instructions in 1918, General Philippe Pétain sought to achieve greater cooperation between air power, artillery and tanks, all acting in support of the assaulting infantry; measures which bore fruit in the counter-offensives of summer 1918.

By mid-1918, the Allies managed to restore some degree of mobility to the war and the end of the stalemate on the Western Front; with less muddy trenches and more open fields. Furthermore, French infantry regiments had been reorganized into multiple small (18 men) combat groups ("Demi-Sections de Combat"). The infantry platoon now had a platoon leader and platoon sergeant, formed in two half-platoons commanded by sergeants. The 1st half-platoon had aGrenadier Squad (Corporal, 2x hand grenadiers, 2x grenade carriers, 2x riflemen) and a LMG Squad (Corporal, 3x rifle grenadiers, 2x ammo carriers, 1x LMG gunner), the 2nd half-platoon had a LMG Squad (Corporal, 3x rifle grenadiers, 2x ammo carriers, 1x LMG gunner) and a Rifle Squad (Corporal, 6x riflemen).

The French regimental records and the statistics of medals given to Chauchat gunners document that they were an essential contribution to the success of these updated infantry tactics. Those were applied to suppress enemy machine gun nests, that would be approached by fire on the move, and destroyed by the combined action of Chauchat automatic fire coming from the sides and VB rifle grenades fired from the front, within less than 200 yards (182.9 meters); in military terms, assault distance. Captured terrain would be defended by emplaced Chauchat fire bases suppressing enemy counter-attacks until heavier machine guns could be brought from the rear.

WWI German use

[edit]

A number of captured Chauchats were used by German front-line infantrymen in flamethrower units and assault troops because they had no equivalent light machine guns of their own until their attempt at one such portable weapon - theMaxim MG 08-15 lightened machine guns - that were issued to them during early 1917.[17] The German army tried to modify some of these guns to fire the7.92×57mm Mauser cartridge.[7]

Belgian use

[edit]
A Belgian machine gunner armed with a Chauchat, guarding a trench

The Belgian Army, which held a large sector of theWestern Front but left its arms industry on the territories occupied by the Germans, started to acquire Chauchats for its infantry in the spring of 1916, getting over 1400 in a year, all in 8 mm Lebel.[18] In order to simplify squad-level logistics in the spring of 1917 a version chambered in their standard7.65×53mm Mauser ammunition was tested, which had a new curved box magazine lacking cutouts for the mud to get inside.[18] During the war, Belgium acquired almost 7000 Chauchats, and reportedly about a half of those were either produced in 7.65 or retrofitted to themodelle 1915-17 standard, with 3250 in active service and an unknown number (taking into account combat losses) in reserve.[19] These numbers, however, are inconsistent with the fact that 4000 of Belgian M1915/17s were sold to Yugoslavia (seebelow).[20] By 1924, Belgium only had 2902 automatic rifles to declare to the League of Nations, with none in reserve.[21]

The remaining ones were modified to address the numerous deficiencies in the unrefined design, the most visually obvious one was being covers against mud and dust on all the orifices.[19] Less obvious modifications were a better bipod and a latch to tighten upper receiver to the lower.[22] Postwar-upgraded guns were designatedFusil-Mitrailleur 1915-27.[23] They were kept in service into the 1930s[19] including some rear-line troops in 1940.

Serbian use

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TheRoyal Serbian Army received at least 1,400 Chauchats, locally known aspuškomitraljez M. 1915, between December 1916 and April 1917.[24] In mid-1920s Yugoslavia bought 4,000 M1915/17s more from Belgium as astopgap measure, and in 1926-1928 rechambered them from 7,65-mm Belgian to captured7.9x57 M1888 ammo, designating the result aspuškomitraljez 7,9 mm. M. 15/26.[20]

Greek use

[edit]
Greek soldiers with a Chauchat LMG (center) during theBattle of Dumlupınar, 1922.

Chauchat entered service withHellenic Army in 1917. The guns fired the6.5×54mm Mannlicher–Schönauer cartridge, stored in semi-circular magazine.Turkish National Movement forces used captured guns during theGreco-Turkish War.[25] The Chauchat was still in frontline use during theGreco-Italian War.[26]

Polish use

[edit]

Poland received French military assistance, notably infantry weapons and artillery, after World War I. As a part of those French weaponry transfers, Poland received over 2,000 Chauchats, which they used extensively during thePolish–Soviet War (1919–1921). After that war, Poland bought more of them, and their numbers reached 11,869, becoming a standard Polish light machine gun (theRKM wz 15). Eventually, about half of them were successfully converted during the mid-1920s to 7.92×57mm Mauser (or 8mm Mauser) and kept in service until the early 1930s under the designationRKM wz 15/27.[27] One remaining specimen of these Polish Chauchats in 8mm Mauser is preserved and visible in the MoD (Ministry of Defence)National Firearms Centre which is a part of theRoyal Armouries inLeeds, Great Britain. Later, in 1936–1937, some 2,650 Chauchats were sold abroad by Poland, some to theMexican Army,[24] othersto Republican Spain and also on the international surplus weapon market.[28]

Finnish use

[edit]

During theWinter War between Soviet Union and Finland, over 5,000 surplus Chauchats were donated by France to Finland, which was short on automatic weapons. The weapons arrived too late to see action but were used inContinuation War, mostly on the home front. After the war they were warehoused until 1955 and sold toInterarmco in 1959–1960.[29]

WWII use

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Chinese-made copies of the Chauchat were captured by Japanese forces during theSecond Sino-Japanese War.[30] French third-line units that faced the German breakthrough during theFall of France in May and June 1940 were still equipped with Chauchat machine guns.

Nazi Germany seized Chauchats from Poland, Belgium, France, Greece and Yugoslavia.[31] Ex-French guns were designatedLeMG 156(f), ex-Yugoslav and ex-PolishLeMG 147(j), ex-GreekLeMG 156(g) and ex-BelgianLeMG 126(b).[32][33] A small number of Chauchats captured by the Germans were issued to theHungarians.[34]

Other uses

[edit]

The Chauchat saw service bySyria in the1948 Arab-Israel war.[35]

Comparison

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This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(October 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
US soldiers practicing marching fire,Fort Custer Training Center, 1919.

Unlike much heavier air- and water-cooled machine guns (such as the Hotchkiss machine gun and the various belt-fedMaxim gun derivatives), and like theMadsen machine gun andLewis gun, the Chauchat was not designed for sustained defensive fire from fixed positions. The tactical edge expected from the light and portable Chauchat machine rifle was to increase the offensive firepower of advancing infantry during the assaults. This particular tactic became known asmarching fire. Colonel Chauchat had already formulated this tactical vision since the early 1900s, in his many proposals to the highest levels of the French military command structure, including General Joffre.

Users

[edit]
French cavalrymen with a Chauchat machine gun during theoccupation of the Ruhr, 1923.
Photograph of a number of uniformed men in a shallow trench, firing rifles and a machine guns towards the left; they appear relaxed and some are smiling.
Crown Prince Carol of Romania firing a Chauchat

Replacement

[edit]
Main article:FM 24/29 light machine gun

After the Armistice of 11 November 1918, the French military decided to upgrade to a more reliable lightsquad automatic weapon that would be designed and manufactured nationally. Experimentation was carried out at theManufacture d'Armes de Châtellerault during the early 1920s, culminating in the adoption of the new light machine gun (in French:fusil-mitrailleur), theFM Mle 1924. Gas-operated, and using a new 7.5 mm rimless cartridge (that would evolve into the7.5x54mm French), this finally corrected all the problems associated with the Chauchat, and was manufactured in large numbers (232,000) and widely used by the French Army until the late 1950s.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Jowett, Philip (2024).The Rif War 1921-26: Morocco's Berber Uprising. Osprey Publishing. pp. 42–43.ISBN 978-1-4728-6247-1.
  2. ^Fitzsimons, Bernard (1978).The Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. Vol. 6.Columbia House. p. 584.ISBN 978-0-906704-00-4.
  3. ^Hogg, Ian (2000).Military Small Arms of the 20th Century (7th (illus.) ed.). Krause. p. 317.ISBN 978-0-87341-824-9.
  4. ^Jordan, David (2005).History of the French Foreign Legion: 1831 the Present Day. Spellmount. p. 167.ISBN 978-1-86227-295-8.
  5. ^Demaison & Buffetaut 1995, pp. 4–5
  6. ^abcdeLaemlein, Tom (October 2012)."That 'Damned, Jammed Chauchat': France's Infamous Light Machine Gun".American Rifleman. pp. 71–73.
  7. ^abcdefgVuillemin, Henri."Centenaire du Chauchat".La Gazette des Armes (in French). pp. 12–21.
  8. ^"Vhu Praha".
  9. ^Hoff, Thomas A. (2012).US Doughboy 1916–19. Warrior. Vol. 79. Osprey Publications.ISBN 978-1-84176-676-8.
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  11. ^Oldham, Chuck, ed. (4 September 2013)."The Five Worst Light Machine Guns (LMGs)".Defense Media Network. Retrieved7 December 2017.
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  13. ^Windrow, Martin; Chappell, Mike (1999).French Foreign Legion, 1914-1945. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 325. Oxford: Osprey Military. p. 38.ISBN 1-85532-761-9.OCLC 40882248.
  14. ^Windrow, Martin (1981).Uniforms of the French Foreign Legion. Littlehampton Book Services Ltd. pp. 61–62.
  15. ^Windrow, Martin; Chappell, Mike (1999).French Foreign Legion, 1914-1945. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 325. Oxford: Osprey Military. p. 39.ISBN 1-85532-761-9.OCLC 40882248.
  16. ^Sumner, Ian; Rava, Giuseppe (2009).French Poilu, 1914-18. Warrior. Vol. 134. Oxford: Osprey. p. 31.ISBN 978-1-84603-332-2.OCLC 229028405.
  17. ^House, Capt. Jonathan M. (August 1984)."Toward Combined Arms Warfare: A Survey of 20th-Century Tactics, Doctrine, and Organization".U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. Archived fromthe original on 25 July 2006. Retrieved14 October 2006.
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  21. ^"Belgium. Table F: Material in Service in the Units".Armaments Year-Book. Geneva:League of Nations. 1924. p. 41 – via National Library of Scotland.
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  23. ^"Instruction sur le Fusil-Mitrailleur 15-27".ABL-History Forum (in French). 17 August 2017.
  24. ^abcdeDemaison & Buffetaut 1995, p. 174
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  39. ^Smith, Joseph E. (1969).Small Arms of the World (11th ed.). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: The Stackpole Company. p. 535.
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  41. ^Shunkov, V.I. (2012).Боевое и служебное оружие России [Military and Service Weapons of Russia] (in Russian). Moscow:Eksmo. p. 7.
  42. ^Khromov, S.S., ed. (1987). "Пулемёты [Machine guns]".Гражданская Война и Военная Интервенция в СССР, Энциклопедия [Encyclopedia of Civil War and Military Intervention in the USSR] (in Russian) (2nd ed.). Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Sovetskaya Entsiklopediya. pp. 490–491.
  43. ^de Quesada, Alejandro (20 January 2015).The Spanish Civil War 1936–39 (2): Republican Forces. Men-at-Arms. Vol. 498. Osprey Publishing. p. 38.ISBN 978-1-78200-785-2.
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  45. ^Smith 1969, p. 682.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Ayres, Leonard P. (1919).The War with Germany - A Statistical Summary. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Bruce, Robert (1997).Machine Guns of World War 1: Live firing classic military weapons. Windrow and Greene.ISBN 1-85915-078-0.
  • Canfield, Bruce N. (2000).U.S. Infantry Weapons of the First World War. Andrew Mowbray Publishers.ISBN 0-917218-90-6.
  • Crowell, Benedict (1919).America's Munitions, 1917–1918. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Crozier, Maj.-Gen. William (1920).Ordnance and the World War. New York: Charles Scribner and Sons.
  • Demaison, Gerard; Buffetaut, Yves (1995).The Chauchat Machine Rifle (Honour Bound). Collector Grade Publications Inc.ISBN 0-88935-190-2. The most complete (209 pages), best documented and profusely illustrated (246 illustrations) source on the subject.
  • Regenstreif, Philippe A. (1994).The CSRG in Poland (Report). Unpublished Report based on material in the Polish Army Archives.
  • Stallings, Laurence (1963).The Doughboys - Story of the AEF, 1917-1918. New York: Harper and Row.
  • Handbook of the Chauchat Machine Rifle, Model of 1915. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1917.
  • Provisional Instruction on the Automatic Rifle, Model 1915 (Chauchat) (Translated from the French Edition of February, 1916 and Revised to June 9, 1917, at Headquarters American Expeditionary Forces, France, War Document #732). University of Michigan Library. 1918.

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