S&W .38/200 (1905?) ww2 victory? Need expert help!

Jericho

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
163   0   0
Location
Alberta
Guys, I need someone who's an expert or pretty knowledgable to PM me about a revolver I purchased. It has a ton of markings and I need help finding out what this revolver is all about.

Thanks,

Matt
 
Last edited:
Its an old canadian army issue. Lots of people on here have one. The 38/200 is a British term ( .38 caliber, 200 grain bullet IIRC). The caliber is .38 Smith&Wesson. Very nice guns and excellent for beginers

Winchester still makes ammo with it. I actually have a box of 1945 army ammo sitting around somewhere.

pics

10415-01.jpg


https://www.joesalter.com/detail.php?f_qryitem=10415
 
Last edited:
No pics yet, I will try my best to get something in the next day or two. Here's a better description

Came into a S&W .38 S&W revolver today. It has a 6 inch barrel and plain walnut grips.

On the barrel, on the right side it says .38 S&W CTG with a funky arrow like thing pointing at it from each side of the phrase

On top it says Smith & Wesson Springfield Mass USA. Below that phrase is 'patented feb 6.06.sept14.09.dec29.14

On the left of the barrel it says SMITH & WESSON and then near the cylinder it has a crown with B A P (the a looks a little slanted to the left, like N without the last upward stroke on the N) and also has .38".767". Just below the .38 it says 3 1/2 tons.

On the top there is nothing about US Property. There are other miscellaneous crowns with BAP all over the revolver including on the cylinder.

On the left side above the trigger guard are 2 crossed swords pointing down and H 3 B in each groove. Sorta like in X (in the left part of the X, bottom part and right part. top part is clear)

On the right side, the S&W crest is worn a little, but it has MADE IN THE USA below the cylinder and has Three markings below it looking like /|\ and below that it says RAF

I was told it was a victory model, but the serial has no V, leading me to think otherwise. 301XX is on the cylinder arm, same S/N on the receiver (can't see either when cylinder is closed). However, intersting, on th ebottom of the barrel, the S/N is 696### which leads me to believe this is not the original barrel, yet it's markings coincide with the rest of the revolver.

It is infact chambered for .38 S&W, not .38 SPL, but I have not slugged the bore to find actual dimensions.

On, on the hammer, along it's 'spine', it says US REG PAT OFF, all together.


Could someone please help me identify what I have here? It would be GREATLY appreciated!
 
In WW1 the British bought loads of them. Also in Ww2, and they wer not all "victory" models.
Of course not being "English Make" It had to pass proof in Britain because it might be one of those "shoddy colonial guns that couldn't be trusted";)
 
The RAF marking kinda leads me to believe it wasn't Canadian Issue, but rather in the Royal Air Force in Britian, but I could be wrong... I have just about zero knowledge on these revolvers.
 
Read that site but it doesn't really say much about pre-victories other than the US PROPERTY being stamped on the left strap, but it isn't on mine. Also, the lanyard ring is missing but there's no s/n stamped on the butt.

A real melon scratcher.

Oh and the bottom of the barrel s/n doesn't match the rest of the firearm, which is another confusing tidbit.
 
Read that site but it doesn't really say much about pre-victories other than the US PROPERTY being stamped on the left strap, but it isn't on mine. Also, the lanyard ring is missing but there's no s/n stamped on the butt.

A real melon scratcher.

Oh and the bottom of the barrel s/n doesn't match the rest of the firearm, which is another confusing tidbit.

Only US issued Victory models will have US PROPERTY stamped on them. British and Canadian issued Pre-V do not have that marking.
Here's mine, Canadian issued.
MPcrop.jpg
 
Actually, now that I inspect further, the barrel, cylinder and extractor all match but the frame doesn't.

There are pics in that link I posted showing where all the s/n are. The crane and crane recess will match each other only. I think you are looking at the crane recess when you say "frame".....
 
Most likely a Lend-LEase gun. To get through the loophole about providing arms to a belligerent country before the US was involved, they 'leased' things to Britain, and as such, marked them all US Property as they expected to get them all back :rolleyes: (Not really, but that was the loophole)

Anyhow much like the No4 Savages were marked. Early war gun.
 
There are pics in that link I posted showing where all the s/n are. The crane and crane recess will match each other only. I think you are looking at the crane recess when you say "frame".....

Yes you are correct. Also another fellow has told me that it's a pre-victory British issue.

Hi, Fry,

The gun you have was one made by S&W under a direct contract with the British, not for Lend Lease, which is why it has no U.S. Property mark. The broad arrow is the British government property mark, the RAF indicates it was issued to the Royal Air Force. The "X" marking is the British inspection and acceptance stamp, put on when the gun was accepted for service. The "BNP" (Birmingham Nitro Proof) was put on when the gun was sold out of depot stores after the end of WWII (probably in the 1950's or 1960's). It is a commercial proof because all guns sold in the UK (even if they were to be exported) had to be proved and a proof mark applied.

The serial number precedes the "Victory Model" series. The situation was that with the large British contract, S&W was approaching serial number 1 million for the M&P series. But their numbering machine only went to six digits. They were supposedly going to add an "A" but someone suggested "V for Victory" and the "Victory Model" came into being with number "V 1".

The "V" was not stamped with the rest of the serial number; all guns were marked with the "V" first, then sent to the numbering machine.

Your gun is virtually a history of WWII all by itself, from the days of the Battle of Britain to the post-war era. It is interesting.

Jim


Is there anyone who can tell me what the crossed swords and the letters H 3 B mean? Swords look like this -> X with a dot in the top, H left, 3 bottom and B on the right.

I've also been in contact with Smith & Wesson and they'll have a historian of theirs do up an indepth research letter regarding my particular revolver's history for only 50 bucks!
 
The crossed sceptres IIRC and the H3B are part of the Birmingham commercial proof mark, B for Burmingham and the H and 3 indicating the inspector and the year of proof. Cannot locate the date code at present.
 
I would say that there is little doubt that what you have is one of the many S&W revolvers acquired by Britain during WWII (officially designated "Smith & Wesson Pistol No. 2") for issue as "substitute standard" in lieu of the official British handgun at that time, namely the Enfield "Pistol, Revolver, No. 2", chambered for the British service cartridge originally referred to as the .380-200.

In fact, that cartridge was nothing more than a British military variant of the .38 S&W cartridge, initially produced with a 200 grain lead bullet until it was decided that contravened the Hague convention against expanding bullets in war, after which a 178 to 180 grain jacketed bullet was used. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.38/200)

Britain did acquire .S&W revolvers during WWI - but they were "Hand Ejector" revolvers built on the larger "N" frame and chambered in .455, the standard British service revolver cartridge then.

The story behind Britain first acquiring these .38 revolvers is interesting ..... In 1939, S&W agreed to design (and later manufacture) what became known as the "Model 1940 Light Rifle, 9mm" but the design failed service trials. However, S&W were unable to repay the money advanced by Britain, having prematurely tooled up for production. They were saved from bankruptcy by acceptance of their offer to work off the debt by supplying the British with service-suitable revolvers. This S&W was able to do quite easily since .38 S&W was one of the standard chamberings of the "Military & Police" series of their commercial ".38 Hand Ejector Model of 1905, Fourth Change" built on the "K" sized frame. (Note that these were accordingly not "Lend-Lease" arms, they were effectively bought and paid for. Mind you, later on some revolvers were provided under the Lend-Lease program ....)

It is not well-known that this model of .38 S&W revolver was Canada's primary official handgun during WWII (adopted quite independently from Britain) - we acquired in excess of 118,000 of them!

To clarify further: the "K" frame "Military & Police" revolver is precisely what a U.S. "Victory Model" also is - albeit chambered in .38 Special. As the war progressed, the quality of finish on all of the military-issue revolvers (i.e. British, Canadian and U.S) was progressively downgraded.

FWIW, here is an image and caption scanned from Chamberlain & Taylerson's "Revolvers of the British Services, 1854-1954" -

SandWPistolNo2.jpg
 
Fry:

I've just noticed that you may be getting a S&W history letter on the revolver. Well worth the money - cost is much less than such letters from Colt, by the way.

I have one on my WWI Canadian-purchase .455 Hand Ejector revolver ..... this is what you can expect to receive -

SWHEletter01.jpg


SWHEletter02.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom