It seems fitting that the last American trench gun was the Winchester Model 1200 since the legendary Winchester Model 1897 was the first trench gun that the U.S. used in WWI.
(A bit of its legend comes from the famed protest by the German Kaiser who said the shotgun went against the rules of war. At the same time, he dropped poison on the trenches that brutally killed and choked men to death. The Kaiser admittedly made a lot of protests, but the United States latched onto the trench gun protest, and the media used it extensively to mock and deride the Kaiser. That’s another story for another time.)
As time progressed, the trench gun stuck around and saw numerous incarnations, with the final being the Winchester Model 1200.
The whats and whys behind a trench gun
Trench gun is a term that applies to a number of different firearms that all serve a similar role. There are a few features and specifications a trench has to have to be considered a trench gun.
Trench guns are shotguns and specifically repeating shotguns that fire 12-gauge cartridges. However, a normal combat shotgun needs additional features to be useful as a trench gun.
First, it needs to have a short barrel of around 20 inches total. (The magazine tube typically holds four or five rounds and is rarely extended beyond that.) The reason the tube stays so short is to accommodate the bayonet and bayonet mount.
A bayonet mount is another feature that’s critical to a trench gun. In the trenches, you might need to get stabby, and close-range combat was the word of the day. The heat shield was another must-have feature of the trench gun. The heat shield protected the user’s hands, especially when things went from shooting to a melee fight.
These guns featured full-length stocks and bead sights and were fairly simple. As time passed, the Model 97 was joined by other trench guns including the Model 12, also from Winchester, as well as the Ithaca 37, the Stevens models 520-30, 620A, and many more.
Related: M1917 Enfield: The forgotten rifle that won World War One
Inside the Model 1200
Until 1964, Winchester’s Model 12 was considered THE shotgun. It became known as the perfect repeater and had a long history of military service. Yet, the Model 12 was fairly dated, with a design dating back to 1912. Further, as manufacturing improved, the Model 12 became more expensive to produce.
The Model 1200 simplified the production process as it was designed for mass production. It also introduced a few features that modernized the gun. The Model 1200 features dual-action bars for enhanced reliability and an anti-binding design. Winchester also used a rotating bolt that would exert a little extra force on the ejecting round for enhanced reliability.
The action became well known for its slick design and smoothness. These guns became very popular with sport shooters, hunters, and similar shooters. Over time they became popular with the police, and finally, they got the military’s eye.
The Model 1200 becomes the last trench gun
In 1968 the United States military purchased a limited number of Model 1200 shotguns and between 1968 and 1969, the US Army acquired a small number of Model 1200 shotguns. (Shotgun purchases by the military have always been fairly low.)
These were purpose-built trench guns from Winchester. They featured the classic metal heatshield, similar to that of the Winchester 1897. This included a bayonet mount that also held a front-sling mount. The gun held four rounds in the tube and could carry an additional in the chamber.
Some modern Model 1200s wore all-wood furniture, but there are a few pictures of troops carrying the gun with overfolding stocks. This would make them more compact and easier to store and carry. Oftentimes a troop with a shotgun would also carry a rifle.
These shotguns served in a fairly limited role and not for very long. Most were sent to National Guard armories, and many were destroyed as the Mossberg 500 later became the standard-issue shotgun. Still, the Model 1200 stuck around and even showed up in Iraq during the initial invasion.
The modern combat shotgun
The modern combat shotgun is no longer a trench gun. The M1014 and Mossberg 590 and 500 MILS series lack heat shields, although mounting a bayonet is an option with the 590A1 shotguns.
The Winchester 1200 was the last to weapon incorporate the features that make a shotgun into a trench gun. The time of the trench gun has passed, but it seems proper the Winchester 1200 completed the circle started by Winchester in 1897.
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