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Fabrique Nationale was formed as a consortium of small gunmakers to produce Mauser rifles for the Belgian Army, and when that work was complete the company basically had nothing else to do...until they met John Browning. Browning had a new pistols design and needed a manufacturer - and FN happened to be a manufacturer in need of a new design. The resulting partnership would last until Browning's death decades later, and essentially created the modern FN that we know today.  

FN produced its one millionth Browning pistol on July 15th, 1912 and decided to throw a huge party in recognition the achievement. It would take 18 months to get everything arranged, and the gala was held on January 31st, 1914. John Browning attended, along with his sone Val, several Belgian government ministers, and FN's international sales agents. As part of the festivities, a number of Baby Browning pistols marked "Un Million" were presented to VIPs, and Browning himself was given this Model 1900 with a gold engraved serial number "1,000,000". It's worth noting that FN did not actually make a million Model 1899/1900 pistols - those only reached about 725,000. The one million number included production of later models, like the Baby Browning and FN 1910.  

Browning was not particularly interested in commemorative guns, and gave the pistol to his notary in Bruges when he left to return to the US. It remained with that man until his death, when it because his widow's property. When the Belgian government passed a gun registration law in 1945, she duly registered it - and that record remains. It was registered again in 1985 in the new computerized Belgian system (listed as a revolver; gun registries are always notoriously full of errors). In 2006 Belgian gun laws changed again, and many guns had to be surrendered to the police. This pistol was one of them; handed in for destruction to a local police office. Fortunately, the officer who received it recognized that it was a historically significant piece, and was able to arrange its preservation. 

UPDATE: Since filming the video, arrangements have been made for this pistol (along with FN 1900 serial number 500,000) to be on display at the Grand Curtius firearms museum in Liege.

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FN's Millionth Pistol: Presented to John Browning; Saved by a Belgian Cop (ad-free)

https://utreon.com/c/forgottenweapons/ http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com Fabrique Nationale was formed as a consortium of small gunmakers to produce Mauser rifles for the Belgian Army, and when that work was complete the company basically had nothing else to do...until they met John Browning. Browning had a new pistols design and needed a manufacturer - and FN happened to be a manufacturer in need of a new design. The resulting partnership would last until Browning's death decades later, and essentially created the modern FN that we know today. FN produced its one millionth Browning pistol on July 15th, 1912 and decided to throw a huge party in recognition the achievement. It would take 18 months to get everything arranged, and the gala was held on January 31st, 1914. John Browning attended, along with his sone Val, several Belgian government ministers, and FN's international sales agents. As part of the festivities, a number of Baby Browning pistols marked "Un Million" were presented to VIPs, and Browning himself was given this Model 1900 with a gold engraved serial number "1,000,000". It's worth noting that FN did not actually make a million Model 1899/1900 pistols - those only reached about 725,000. The one million number included production of later models, like the Baby Browning and FN 1910. Browning was not particularly interested in commemorative guns, and gave the pistol to his notary in Bruges when he left to return to the US. It remained with that man until his death, when it because his widow's property. When the Belgian government passed a gun registration law in 1945, she duly registered it - and that record remains. It was registered again in 1985 in the new computerized Belgian system (listed as a revolver; gun registries are always notoriously full of errors). In 2006 Belgian gun laws changed again, and many guns had to be surrendered to the police. This pistol was one of them; handed in for destruction to a local police office. Fortunately, the officer who received it recognized that it was a historically significant piece, and was able to arrange its preservation. UPDATE: Since filming the video, arrangements have been made for this pistol (along with FN 1900 serial number 500,000) to be on display at the Grand Curtius firearms museum in Liege. Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Guido Schriewer

our lord and savior jonny B.... . damn silly destroying of firearms. they could might as well auction them to legal owners with some license.

Chairman

And yet again: registration leads to confiscation.

zspikez

So amazing Ian that you helped this unique piece be recognised and publicly displayed. A great piece of Belgian and American heritage. Now you are part of the chain that has preserved this weapon for posterity.

Kenneth Marshall

Gun Amnesty Surrenders are paper shredder of firearms history. I've seen lots of WW2 captures done in because of un-aware decedents that think a gun is just a gun and Probably not many lugers and Nambus used by criminals - and not that the police would detain the criminals anyway)

ViejoLobo

Amnesty. First we change the law to make you a criminal. Then we rob you--literally-- of your property and rights. Once you surrender that property and those rights we forgive and "forget." Sic semper Tyrannis!

Robert Rowe

When an ignorant kid digs their father's WWII bring back STG 44 out of the closet to have the weapon destroyed in return for a $100 Walmart gift card, baby gun Jesus weeps. (And even the cops in charge told her NO! SELL IT!!! But that was the exception which proves the rule...) https://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2012/12/woman-turns-in-valuable-wwii-gun-at-police-station-weapon-buy-back

Terry

I believe European notaries, especially a century ago, performed many of the functions that are performed by lawyers in America. Given the amount of his business dealings there, he may have an amount of gratitude towards this guy, and gave him this as a momento of all his work for Browning.

Chairman

Previous Ian video, if you don’t have any paperwork you can’t sell it…

Seamus Curran

iirc from the same or another video you can often put in a request for the paperwork if it exists.