The Long-Lost Liu: NRA National Firearms Museum Featured Gun Video

http://www.nationalfirearmsmuseum.org In the turbulent years surrounding World War i, many nations experimented with upgrading the traditional bolt-action rifle. One such semi-automatic was the Chinese Liu rifle. While in charge of Hanyang Arsenal, General T.E. Liu developed a gas-operated rifle with a muzzle gas trap cap, utilizing a hinged block at the rear of the bolt that dropped down for locking. 



General Liu came to America in 1914 and contracted with Pratt & Whitney to produce the machinery necessary for quantity manufacturing as well as prototype 8mm rifles for testing and evaluation at Springfield Armory. But after the machinery was loaded onto a boat bound for China, the vessel sank in transit. Subsequently, General Liu suffered a stroke, and while the recovered shipment eventually reached Shanghai in 1919, Liu's brainchild was never to see adoption and issue. This rifle, in the National Firearms Museum collection, was given by a donor whose ancestor received it from Lt. General Chiang Ting-Tzu, a member of the Chinese delegation that came to America.

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Author: NFMCurator; Uploaded: Nov 10, 2009; Duration: 2:0; Views: 18

Tags: firearm  firearms  museum  museums  gun  guns  national  nra  rifle  association  chinese  liu  general  t.e.  lt.  chiang  ting-tzu  national express national lottery results national rail national express trains national curriculum national rail journey planner national express east anglia national lottery national theatre national trust


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