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#1
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I have these which may be of interest. All are in Canadian use and most pre-date the Dieppe raid.
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Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
#2
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And three more.
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Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
#3
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Some time ago we had a discussion of the use of Thompsons in Canadian service..here we see a trooper carrying one..
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Alex Blair :remember :support :drunk: |
#4
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No question that Canadians had Thompson SMGs in the UK. However, they were not used at Dieppe and they were not used by Canadians in Norhwest Europe. They were used by Canadians in Sicily and Italy.
(you had to open that can of worms again, didn't you!) ![]()
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Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
#5
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I think a lot of people have said before regarding anything military "Never say never!"
So many people look at official documents and regulations for everything from clothing, weapons and equipment to methods of operations and tactics and pronounce them as final proof that something did or did not happen. Look at any photo of any group of soldiers, sailors and airmen (not on a formal parade or guard duty) of any nationality on active service and you will find dozens of variations in weapons, clothing and equipment, even in the same platoon, almost none of which is regulation. People doing a job develop the most convenient, comfortable way of doing it. Supply systems may not keep up or provide substitutes for "official" equipment. The troops get their hands on something better - even enemy equipment. Of course there is always fashion. In a modern day large military exercise regular troops can be instantly identified from reserve/home guard troops beside them, issued with exactly the same equipment and uniforms by the way they talk, wear and carry their gear and the way they behave between themselves and with their officers amongst other pointers. It is a brave man who says that troops on active service behaved or were equipped in a uniform way just because some official document or regulation prescribed those actions or equipment. |
#6
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There are a number of reports that clearly identified the troops carrying Stens at Dieppe. In fact, the troops' unfamiliarity with these, and the fact that the magazines were delivered loaded and did not give the troop any time to inspect the weapons, led to criticisms about the Sten from raid survivors.
I will try to dig these out later. Michael R. -Note that I only refer to Canadians in my previous comments. Lang - Note that documents and regulations are the basis for any study. Yes, a soldier or two may have carried unauthorized equipment but that is not the basis for study. As to TSMG in Dieppe by Canadians - good luck finding .45ACP ammunition once you have expended your magazine.
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Those who live by the sword will be shot by those of us who have progressed. - M38A1, 67-07800, ex LETE |
#7
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Full marks to Alex for being able to recognize a Thompson....
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