cyclone: believe me, that WAS a sight. Maxims are what I went to England to research in the first place. Took 5 months to get permission to visit the Pattern Room WITH a camera. Presented myself at the Factory gate and was escorted to the Pattern Room by a lovely chappie with a cocked Sterling AFTER he checked my letter. He waited until PR staff confirmed that I was really supposed to be there. Rather impressive; they knew more about me than I did.
Just got in the door when the fellow who met me asked, "Tell me, old chap, have you seen one of THESE?" and tossed me this ugly, sawed off little thing. I asked what it was and he asked what I thought it was, so I said that it looked like a miniature EM-2. "Top secret, you know," was how his reply started.... and we spent the next hour dissecting and playing with the X-70 4.85mm IW, s/n 04. The first photograph (left side only) had been released only the previous day. After stripping it down and playing with it, he asked if I had any suggestions. (ME????) I did have three and they put one into production on the later Test rifles, so I can honestly say that I own 1-1/2 lines of Small Arms of the World.
So then we played with Maxims: Number 1, Number 100, several later models, Russian, German, German '08/16 s/n 9: only one in existence. Spent hours just with Maxims, gave them a copy of the manual on the 08 that I wrote for the Shilo Museum. Saw LOTS of neat things. 400 Lee-Enfields on one gigantic rack, no two the same. AKM, just 8 months old, that came out of Northern Ireland. Sealed Pattern of my Snider Carbine. Parker-Hale and Sealed Pattern 1858, side by side. Utterly mind-boggling.
Next day, visited the IWM and ID'd 3 Maxims for them, including the very FIRST. IWM had the gun and no documentation, Science Museum had the documents (including a letter from Maxim) but couldn't find the gun: it was at the IWM. Sort of a no-brainer, but it felt good. Saw a Zepp Maxim from the Zepp that my grandmother and grandfather both saw shot down over London; they only met 8 years later.
What a rush! I'm STILL trying to figure out how to get that V-2 into my camera bag.
gyates93: the man who shot my buns off was Private John E. Snow, known as "Jack", Newfoundland Regiment. He joined in Town and served initially at Gallipoli, arrived in France just too late for the Big Push, but he was in on Gueudecourt, Sailly and others. He was "KIA" at Monchy-le-Preuex but really was only knocked out, woke up with a Gew98 in his face and a jackboot in his ribs. He was sent to Heilsburg in E. Prussia, then to a farm in what is now Poland, worked there for half a mark a day. A year after he started there, Red Cross found him and he got 13 months' Red Cross parcels all at once. He and two friends, an Irishman and a Scot, escaped and spent 5 months walking through the Russian Civil War. They came in sight of Smolensk before they turned around and headed back to Germany because it was safer in the hands of their enemies than it was with their friends. "Fritz kept us drunk all the way back to Heilsburg," he told me. When the War ended, he did a week in a hospital and was back on his feet for the March into Cologne. Amazing story and it all has been reported and documented.
I took a photo at the time we went shooting for the first time and put it on the front page of The Pilot, the rb newspaper out of Lewisporte. I was the editor at that time and tried to have a Great War story every November 11 issue and every July 1 issue. Jack's picture was in the paper in November, 1979 and I wrote up his Great War adventures in November, 1980. There are other articles about, and by, him in The Legionary and other publications. Really nice guy, too, very literate. He died in 1982 and I still miss him.
I will run away now and give you all some peace from my ramblings.