Texas Star
US Veteran
I read a book by a Member of Parliament who served in the British Army dring WW II. He carried a .38 revolver, brand not specified. (Book: "The Golden Carpet.")
He had fired several rounds in practice, and before an upcoming offensive, tried to scrounge some more ammo.
He had to borrow some from his general. (He was a staff officer.) The general had some, mainly because his handgun of preference was "of a different caliber." (Type not stated.)
I read somewhere that in most British line regiments, including tankers, the ammo issue was just six rounds in the gun and either six or twelve spares. I read an account by one British officer who went into the El Alamein attack with just his .38 and nine rounds, total! He shot an Italian, who died very slowly, from a hit in the back. (Both waited for hours for treatment at a wound station.)
And I've read that German forces usually just issued a 25-round box of pistol ammo, whether 7.65mm or 9mm, and that this was supposed to last the soldier for the war. Pistols were regarded as being mainly for emergency, closeup use, and ammo wasn't doled out too freely.
By contrast, a US soldier with a .45 had 21 rounds on him, in the gun and two spare mags. And probably more, if he wanted it or ran low.
Soldiers no doubt scrounged submachinegun ammo when it'd fit their pistols, or stole ammo off the bodies of their casualties.
Enemy handguns were also prized, and often acquired. A great many German and Italian pistols were dropped off of returning ships when announcements were made that severe penalties awaited any British soldier caught trying to bring a non-issued handgun into the UK.
At least two famous RAF pilots carried enemy guns, one a Luger, the other a .32 Beretta. They scrouged them from their Intelligence people, who took them off of Luftwaffe prisoners. The Germans got the Luger back, when the Mosquito pilot was forced to bail out over occupied Denmark and became a POW. He wrote that the Germans weren't happy to find that 9mm on him, but that he wasn't abused too badly over it.
I'm sure that Commando and parachute units had more pistol ammo and more practice than most troops. So would SOE operatives and SAS units, who carried whatever they wanted, if they could acquire it. But can anyone else confrm that the average British soldier/officer with a revolver was issued more than 12-18 rounds total? With 12 more held in unit Supply?
He had fired several rounds in practice, and before an upcoming offensive, tried to scrounge some more ammo.
He had to borrow some from his general. (He was a staff officer.) The general had some, mainly because his handgun of preference was "of a different caliber." (Type not stated.)
I read somewhere that in most British line regiments, including tankers, the ammo issue was just six rounds in the gun and either six or twelve spares. I read an account by one British officer who went into the El Alamein attack with just his .38 and nine rounds, total! He shot an Italian, who died very slowly, from a hit in the back. (Both waited for hours for treatment at a wound station.)
And I've read that German forces usually just issued a 25-round box of pistol ammo, whether 7.65mm or 9mm, and that this was supposed to last the soldier for the war. Pistols were regarded as being mainly for emergency, closeup use, and ammo wasn't doled out too freely.
By contrast, a US soldier with a .45 had 21 rounds on him, in the gun and two spare mags. And probably more, if he wanted it or ran low.
Soldiers no doubt scrounged submachinegun ammo when it'd fit their pistols, or stole ammo off the bodies of their casualties.
Enemy handguns were also prized, and often acquired. A great many German and Italian pistols were dropped off of returning ships when announcements were made that severe penalties awaited any British soldier caught trying to bring a non-issued handgun into the UK.
At least two famous RAF pilots carried enemy guns, one a Luger, the other a .32 Beretta. They scrouged them from their Intelligence people, who took them off of Luftwaffe prisoners. The Germans got the Luger back, when the Mosquito pilot was forced to bail out over occupied Denmark and became a POW. He wrote that the Germans weren't happy to find that 9mm on him, but that he wasn't abused too badly over it.
I'm sure that Commando and parachute units had more pistol ammo and more practice than most troops. So would SOE operatives and SAS units, who carried whatever they wanted, if they could acquire it. But can anyone else confrm that the average British soldier/officer with a revolver was issued more than 12-18 rounds total? With 12 more held in unit Supply?
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