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Hardcover Machine Gun: The Story of the Men and the Weapon That Changed the Face of War Book

ISBN: 0312320663

ISBN13: 9780312320669

Machine Gun: The Story of the Men and the Weapon That Changed the Face of War

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The machine gun is a uniquely American invention that, more than any other single invention, revolutionized the way in which war was waged. Machine Gun tells the story of the people responsible for the development of the weapon itself - beginning with Samuel Colt's creation of the first mass-produced, rapid-firing revolver; to Dr. Richard Gatling and his Gatling Gun; and Hiram Maxim, whose Maxim Gun was the first truly automatic weapon. In this engrossing...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Interesting and Well Researched.

I wont repeat the details contained in the other reviews. The book is well-written, the topic is interesting, and I learned a lot about some inventors who get very little attention from scholars. This is a dandy book to take along on vacation or a business trip. It gets 5 Stars from me for being what a book is supposed to be...entertaining and informative.

The Gun that Ruled During War

"Machine Gun: The Story of the Men and the Weapon That Changed the Face of War" is at times slow, but interesting and worth reading nonetheless. Anthony Smith does not simply document the history and development of the machine gun; he tells the story of early American ingenuity and entrepreneurship. He writes about warfare and the voraciousness of various countries vying for power and of others struggling to maintain supremacy. Anthony Smith tells the history of a fledging United States that welcomed any innovations that would produce more for less. Smith writes of how Samuel Colt revolutionized and perfected mass production to the point where artisanship was replaced by factory production. Anthony Smith illustrates the industrialization of American society during the 1800s. He describes an early case of female discrimination whereby women were segregated from men while manufacturing cartridges - a dangerous undertaking. Smith gives the reader well documented biographical insights on important American machine gun inventors, such as James Puckle, Richard Gatling, Samuel Colt, Hiram Maxim, John M. Browning, Isaac Lewis and others. Smith discusses the various motives behind these inventors. Some of these men invented and perfected their machine guns for diverse reasons: some, like Richard Gatling, invented the Gatling to save lives during America's Civil War while others, like Hiram Maxim, and Samuel Colt created their weapons for fame and fortune - while others simply wished "to make a pile of money". The author illustrates how the Winchester 73 may have won the West, but it was the machine gun that decided the fait of men during full-scale battles. Smith clearly documents the evolution and capabilities of the machine gun and the role it played during wars in Europe, Asia, Africa . . . and the "war to end all wars" - World War I - a war where millions of soldiers and civilians perished by the indiscriminate rapid-firing machine gun. The reader will learn of countries that were fascinated with the machine gun and willing to purchase it in the thousands - countries like Egypt, China, France, Russia, which purchased the largest quantities, while the British army procured the least - the British army resisted all innovations in military tactics. However, Britain would learn that "if attrition of an enemy was required, they [the machine gun] could do the job very satisfactorily". Moreover, the machine gun did do the job satisfactorily in the Russo-Turkish, Franco-Prussian, and Zulu, as well as in other wars. Nevertheless, the machine gun had "severely fractured the old style of warfare, with romance, glory, and precious pageantry"; this has all but disappeared according to some British military leaders. Although Anthony Smith's book "Machine Gun: The Story of the Men and the Weapon That Changed the Face of War" is at times slow, it is still worth reading; it will give readers a good understanding of the men and the inventions that changed not j
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