List of World War II weapons of the United States

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Various firearms used by the United States military during World War II, displayed at the National Firearms Museum in Fairfax County, Virginia

The following is a list of World War II weapons of the United States, which includes firearm, artillery, vehicles, vessels, and other support equipment known to have been used by the United States Armed Forces—namely the United States Army, United States Army Air Forces, United States Marine Corps, United States Navy, and United States Coast Guard—as well as the Office of Strategic Services and other U.S. government agencies involved in the war, during American involvement between 1941 and 1945. This list includes experimental technology that, while created during the war, was never issued as intended.

Blades

Small arms

Pistols (manual and semi-automatic)

Image Name Type Role/s Action Origin Base model/s Manufacturer/s Cartridge/s Effective firing range (m) From (year) Estimated wartime quantity Unloaded wt (kg) Notes
Colt M1911
Pistol Sidearm Recoil-operated (
Short recoil
)
 United States
Colt Springfield
.45 ACP 1911 1.1
Colt M1903 Pistol Sidearm Blowback, single action  United States
Colt
.32 ACP (M1903)
.380 ACP (M1908)
1903 0.68
Colt New Service revolver Revolver Sidearm Double action  United States
Colt
1909 356000
Colt M1917 revolver Revolver Sidearm Double action, rotating cylinder  United States
Colt
.45 ACP, .45 Auto Rim 1917 1.1
Smith & Wesson M1917 revolver Revolver Sidearm Double/single action, swing-out cylinder  United States Smith & Wesson .45 ACP, .45 Auto Rim 1917 1.0
Colt Official Police Revolver Sidearm Double action  United States
Colt
.38/200, .41 Long Colt
1907
Smith & Wesson Model 10 revolver Revolver Sidearm Double action  United States Smith & Wesson .38 Long Colt, .38 Special, .38 S&W 1899 0.907

Automatic pistols and submachine guns

Image Name Type Role/s Action Origin Base model/s Manufacturer/s Cartridge/s Effective firing range (m) Cyclic rate of fire (rpm) From (year) Estimated wartime quantity Unloaded wt (kg) Notes
M1 Thompson submachine gun Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback, blish lock  United States pplicker (firearms) Blowback, blish lock
Auto-Ordnance Company
.45 ACP 150 700 1921 4.5-4.9 30-round magazine.
M2 Hyde Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback, open bolt  United States
Marlin firearms company
.45 ACP 570 1942 400 4.19 Never issued or saw service. The M2 Hyde was the gap between the M1 Thompson and the M3 grease gun. It was designed to be lighter and cheaper to produce than the Thompson (since the Thompson was an extremely expensive weapon). It succeeded at both goals, but it was almost immediately replaced by the cheaper grease gun. Used 20-round or 30-round Thompson magazines.
M3 and M3A1 submachine gun Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback, open bolt  United States General Motors .45 ACP 91 450 1943 655363 3.61-3.70 30-round magazine.
M50 Reising submachine gun Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback (Delayed blowback), closed bolt  United States
Harrington & Richardson
.45 ACP 550 1941 2.8-3.1
United Defense M42 Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback  United States United Defense Supply Corp. .45 ACP 700 1942 15000 4.54 25-round box magazine (also issued with two 25-round magazines welded face-to-face)
M55 Reising submachine gun
Submachine gun Close-quarters, personal security Blowback (Delayed blowback), closed bolt  United States
Harrington & Richardson
.45 ACP 550 1941 Identical to the M50 SMG except it sported a wire stock and had no compensator. It also had a slightly shorter barrel. The M50 and M55 served as the go-to SMGs before the Thompson.

Rifles

Image Name Type Role/s Action Origin Base model/s Manufacturer/s Cartridge/s Effective firing range
(m)
From (year) Estimated wartime quantity Unloaded weight
(kg)
Notes
M1903 Springfield Standard rifle
Front-line
Bolt-action
 United States Gewehr 98 Springfield Armory 610 1903 3000000~ 3.9
M1903A4 sniper rifle Sniper rifle Long-Range Precision
Bolt-action
 United States Gewehr 98 Springfield Armory 1000 1903
M1 Garand Battle rifle
Front-line / Assault
Gas-operated, rotating bolt
 United States
Harrington & Richardson, International Harvester
.30-06 Springfield 457 1934 4.31 - 5.3
M1917 Enfield rifle
Standard rifle
Front-line
Bolt-action
 United States Winchester, Remington Arms, Eddystone Arsenal .30-06 Springfield 549 1917 4.167
M1941 Johnson rifle Battle rifle
Front-line / Assault
Recoil-operated (
Short-recoil), rotating bolt
 United States Johnson Automatics, Inc. .30-06 Springfield 1941 70000~ 4.31
Krag–Jørgensen Standard rifle Second-line
Bolt-Action
 United States Springfield Armory .30-40 Krag 1892 3.82
Winchester Model 1895 Standard rifle
Front-line
Lever action  United States
Browning Arms
.30-06 Springfield 1895 4.2
Winchester Model 70 sniper rifle Sniper rifle Long-Range Precision
Bolt-action
 United States
U.S. Repeating Arms
.30-06 Springfield 1936 2.7 - 3.6
Remington Model 8 Battle rifle
Front-line / Assault
Recoil-operated
 United States Remington Arms 1905 3.6

Carbines

Image Name Type Role/s Action Origin Base model/s Manufacturer/s Cartridge/s Effective firing range (m) Cyclic rate of fire (rpm) From (year) Estimated wartime quantity Unloaded wt (kg) Notes
M1 carbine Carbine Gas-operated (
short-stroke piston), rotating bolt
 United States
Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation
, Commercial Controls Corporation
.30 Carbine 275 270 1942 6121309 2.4 15-round box magazines, or 30-round curved magazines.

A common practice was to strap two 15-round magazine ammo pouches to the gun stock.

Marlin Model 1894 Carbine Close-quarters / Personal Security Lever action  United States Marlin Firearms 30-30 137-183 91 1894 2.72 - 2.95
Winchester Model 1894 Carbine Close-quarters / Personal Security Lever action  United States Winchester 30-30 137-183 91 1894 3.1

Shotguns

Grenades and grenade launchers

Mines

Recoilless rifles

Flamethrowers

Machine guns

Infantry and dual

Vehicle and aircraft machine guns and autocannons

Tanks

Light tanks

Medium tanks

Heavy tanks

Tank destroyers

Flamethrower tanks

Other vehicles

Passenger vehicles

Motorcycles

Amphibious vehicles

Trucks

Artillery

Infantry Guns

Infantry mortars

  • M1 Mortar
  • M2 4.2 inch mortar
  • M2 Mortar

Heavy mortars and multiple rocket launchers

Self-propelled guns

Field artillery

Fortress and siege guns

Anti-tank guns

  • National Forge & Ordnance 37mm gun (1941) - export (to Dutch) only
  • M3 37 mm Anti-Tank Gun
  • M1 57 mm Anti-Tank Gun
  • M5 3-Inch Anti-Tank Gun
  • 105mm gun T8
    AT/AA gun (cancelled)

Anti-tank infantry weapons

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Hogg, pp. 77–79

Bibliography

  • Hogg, Ian V. (1998). Allied Artillery of World War Two. Marlborough, UK: Crowood Press. .