Original Item: One-of-a-Kind. Think of The Bridge on the River Kwai. William Holden holding his Sten and looking very grim. And how many other war movies do we remember where we remember the Sten but not the actors? Probably quite a few. Not only was the Sten ubiquitous in movies and among Allied troops, but the German Army, of all people, eventually made numerous copies of it. Earlier, Otto Skorzeny, the famous head of Germany’s equivalent of Britain’s Commandos, tried hard to get permission to use the silenced version of the Sten for his troops, but his request was rejected on grounds of national—read that as National Socialist—arrogance.
The Sten gun came about as a weapon of necessity, following the extremely large loss of small arms due to the Evacuation from the harbor of Dunkirk, France, May 26, 1940 – Jun 4, 1940. British / Forces were now engaged in the Battle of Britain, and needed replacement arms, and fast. The British did have access to Thompson machine guns from the U.S., but they were expensive and took time to procure. The MP28 Machine gun was one alternative, but also expensive. What the British needed was a gun that utilized mostly stamped components, which could be quickly and relatively cheaply made, but also be reliable.
The Royal Small Arms Factory, Enfield was commissioned to produce this alternative. The two designers were Major R. V. Shepherd, OBE, Inspector of Armaments in the Ministry of Supply Design Department at The Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, and Harold John Turpin, Senior Draughtsman of the Design Department of the Royal Small Arms Factory (RSAF), Enfield. They lent the first letters of their last names to the design, along with EN for Enfield, resulting in the STEN. There were several versions produced during the war, and it was the Sten MkII and MkIII that first came into prominence, with the more “upmarket” Sten MkV appearing later. However there were other designs before major production, as well as some intermediate designs, which were never made in large numbers, and never really left the prototype stage.
The original first model design, known as the Mark I, had a conical flash hider and fine finish. The foregrip, forward handle and some of the stock were made of wood. The stock consisted of a small tube, similar to the Mark II Canadian. A design choice that was only present on the Mark I was that the pistol grip could be rotated forward to make it easier to stow. 100,000 Mark I Stens were made before production was moved to the Mark II, however many of these were MkI* types, which did away with the wooden furniture, foregrip, and flash hider.
What we have here is a Sten MkII Display Submachine Gun, which was modified with a MkI type fore stock (though it does not fold), attempting to recreate one of the early Stens that were then later modified. From what we can tell, most of the parts are original, including the trigger group with receiver base cup, magazine well, barrel, barrel jacket, loop but stock and the deactivated bolt assembly. These are attached to a BATF compliant steel dummy receiver, which has 25% that is solid bar stock. The main additions are the replica MkII bayonet, and the wooden fore stock with fore grip, which is a fabricated replica.
The trigger still moves and the selector moves, though the bolt handle does not move, per BATF regulations. The original bolt section is installed into the ejection port to give it a great look. The display gun has a great look, with most of the body painted a nice OD green. There are original markings on many parts of the gun, especially on the magazine well and trigger group, definitely an avenue of further research. It comes complete with an original magazine, where permitted. Elsewhere a deactivated magazine will be sent
A fine original display gun fully compliant with BATF regulations to be non-functional and totally legal without any type of license.
NOTE: Magazine will be deactivated if shipped to a state where they are prohibited.