BRITISH ENFIELD RIFLES, LEE ENFIELD
NO. 4 AND NO. 5 RIFLES
From the Publisher
Charles Stratton has done his usual admirable job of organizing a vast
body of information and make it clear and concise for the experienced
historian and collector as well as the novice. This is the second in
a projected four volume series with each book appearing at approximately
18 month intervals.
Book Description
At the start of World War II, Great Britain was badly under armed. The
disastrous campaigns in France in 1940 which resulted in the massive
evacuation under fire of British and Allied troops from the beaches
of Dunkirk and Calais further depleted her inventory of arms. Massive
shipments of military arms from the U.S. Government and sporting arms
from private American citizens helped to ease the situation somewhat,
but it was the amazing production program that the British had put into
effect as early as September 1939 that saved the British Army.
In the first few years of the war, the tired
old Lee-Enfield Mk I and Mk III carried the brunt of infantry fighting.
Most of these rifles had been built before 1918 and were wearing out
quickly. In the 1920s, the British army had begun development of a new,
easier-to-manufacture version of the bolt action Lee-Enfield. The result
was the Mk V with its receiver sight and stiffer barrel. Some 20,000
were produced for trials but then the labor governments of the late
1920s and early 1930s saw no reason to continue the development of armaments.
Hadn't the League of Nations promised to settle all future international
disputes?
But in 1939, as Hitler's Germany was crushing
Poland, a crash development program was instituted to put the Mk V Enfield
into production was begun to make up for lost years. By 1941, the new
rifle by now rechristened the No. 4 Enfield was pouring out of factories
around the country. Production was begun also in Canada and in the United
States.
The new rifle was equipped with an improved
receiver rear sight that brought the aperture nearer the eye and improved
the solider's marksmanship. The heavy nose cap was gone, replaced by
a lighter band with protective ears to guard the front sight. The long
Pattern 1914 bayonet had been replaced by a short spike useful for guarding
prisoners and little else an implicit recognition that the static, trench-oriented
warfare was gone forever, replaced by maneuver warfare spearheaded by
mobile columns of armor and infantry. A new, stiffer barrel was installed
to improve the rifle's accuracy. Otherwise, it remained remarkably similar
to its earlier incarnations.
The No. 4 Enfield was produced in a wide number
of variations, most having to do with ways to cut production costs and
time. The rifles poured out of the factories and were shipped to the
soldiers in the front lines and training camps as fast they could be
made. The No. 4 provided excellent service in the British tommy's hands
from the Arctic Circle to the North African Desert to the steamy jungles
of Burma.
As the rifle production program began, the
British Army, impressed by the havoc wrought against the Red army by
Finnish snipers in the Winter War of 1939-40, also began development
of a new sniper rifle. The private firearms firm of Holland and Holland,
famous for the sporting rifles and shotguns, developed a sturdy mounting
system for the 32 Telescopic Sight and the No. 4 Mk I (T) was born.
This rifle in the hands of British snipers in the regular Army and in
such special warfare units as the Secret Air Service and the Commandos,
inflicted casualties and havoc on Axis troops far beyond their number.
In 1944, it became clear that a smaller,
lighter rifle was needed for combat in the heavy jungles of Southeast
Asia. A team of Enfield engineers stripped the No. 4 rifle to its essentials,
shortened the barrel and developed a flash-hider to shield the soldier
from the heavy muzzle concussion and flash, and added a padded butt
plate. The No. 5 rifle popularly known as the British Enfield Jungle
Carbine served well during the remainder of World War II and through
the communist insurgencies that plagued Southeast Asia during the early
Cold War years.
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