![]() ![]() For complete information on all models, please consult one or both of these excellent books. Limit the information I can provide on experimental pistols. I have tried to include detailed information on the more common guns, but have necessarily had to More difficult to get a sense of the chronology of the guns. Dowell, Bruce, and Cuthbertson do not always agree on model nomenclature, but from them we have starting points for sorting the various guns.īruce’s book is arranged by order of production, as much as is feasible, whereas Cuthbertson’s book is ordered by caliber, making it somewhat easier to find information on a particular gun, but Prior to Dowell’sīook model numbers may not have been assigned to many of the pistols. To the best of my knowledge, Webley & Scott never referred to any of their guns using a production date as a model number. Name of the firm was changed to Messrs Webley & Scott Limited.Īt this writing, there are two primary sources for information on the Webley & Scott auto pistols: Gordon Bruce’s Webley & Scott Automatic Pistols, and Stephen Cuthbertson’s Worldwide WebleyĪnd the Harrington and Richardson Connection. Scott & Sons, and Richard Ellis & Son merged, forming The Webley and Scott Revolver & Arms Company Limited of Birmingham and London. ![]() Dowell covers the auto pistols, but not in detail. Turn of 20th Centuryįor the early history of the Webley company, please see William Dowell’s The Webley Story.
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