United Shoe Machinery Corporation
United Shoe Machinery Corporation (sometimes abbreviated USMC) was a U.S.-based manufacturer of various industrial machinery, particularly for the shoe manufacturing industry (so is the corporate name,) which at one time monopolized the American shoe machinery business,[1] and an important federal government's defense contractor during the World War I, Interbellum years, World War II and the Cold war era, which developed and manufactured various land and aircraft armaments, as well as components for the military hardware made by other manufacturers. Founded in Beverly, Massachusetts, its corporate headquarters were eventually relocated to Boston, with key production facilities scattered around Massachusetts.
Research and development
The corporation pioneered the development and production of a synthetic leather materials.[2]
During the Interbellum era corporate Research Division designed and developed gun mounts, gun turrets, fire control equipment, automatic guns, automatic fuse setting, bomb release equipment, automatic conveying equipment, and automatic rocket projectors, as well as many other things of military interest.[3]
During the postwar years, the corporate engineers experimented intensively with armoured fighting vehicles of modular design, kindred by common chassis, common armor elements, interchangeable armament, automatic loading for weapons, and low weight in order to attain high speeds, coupled with various comfort add-ons provided for the housed crew.[4]
Production items
- T54E1 medium tank
- Turtle-series, IVI prototype gun motor carriages (33 tons, tracked, turreted, 4-man crew situated below the upper hull line, 600-hp engine, armor thickness 3 to 61⁄2 inches, dimensions: 18'7" long, 9'4" wide, 7' tall, carrying various promptly interchangeable turrets, different main armament with automatic feed system; plus twin 30 mm driver's coaxial machine gun, one .30 caliber commander's machinegun, and one .50 caliber AA machinegun each; weapon stabilization in addition to driver stabilization, internal air cleaning and air conditioning systems)[4]
- IVI Gun Motor Carriage, quadruple .50 caliber machine gun (main)[4]
- IVI-C Gun Motor Carriage, twin 37 mm guns[5]
- IVI-D Gun Motor Carriage, single-barrel 75 mm tank gun (gunner's compartment separated from the crew compartment, allowing the gunner to move with the weapon in elevation and in azimuth)[5]
- prototype heavy armored combat vehicles with oscillating turret
- prototype armored combat vehicles with externally mounted main gun
- Gun turrets and armament
- tank turrets
- T20E1 (Fisher Body Div. of General Motors)[6] Medium Tank turret mounting the 76 mm M1 gun with an autoloader[7]
- T22E1 (Chrysler's DTA)[8] Medium Tank turret mounting the 75 mm M3 gun equipped with an autoloader[7]
- T77 Gun Motor Carriage multibarrel .50 caliber machine gun mount T89[9]
- High Speed Harmonic Drive Speed Reducer for slow and stabilized rotation of shipboard or tank heavy gun turrets
- tank guns[10]
- 37 mm tank gun M5[10]
- 37 mm antitank gun M3[11][12]
- 37 mm towed antitank gun carriage[11]
- shell ramming[13]
- fuze setting devices[13]
- B-17 Flying Fortress ball turret[14]
- YA-14 Shrike and XP-71 pressurized turret[15]
- waist gun mounts
- XB-40 Flying Fortress[16] and XB-41 Liberator power-operated M5 waist gun mounts[17]
- remote hydraulic controls for special M2 machine gun installations for aircraft
- gas-piston operated guns
- machined items for attack and utility helicopters (e.g. UH-1 Iroquois)
- Aerospace equipment
- machined items for military satellites (Telstar)
- Industrial machinery
- electronic component assembly machines
- automatic assembly machines for assembling military radar sets
Structure
The corporation had several divisions, subsidiaries and affiliates, which were located mainly in the Massachusetts.
References
- ^ United Shoe Machinery Co., Information: A Monthly Digest of Current Events and World Progress Covering Jan. 1915-May 1917, v. 3, p. 307.
- ^ Ward, A. G. Substitutes for Leather, New Scientist, 5 September 1963, no. 355, p. 502.
- ^ His Brogue Livens Field Test of Gun, The Exponent, January 1949, v. 61, no. 1, p. 29.
- ^ a b c Icks 1965, p. 26.
- ^ a b Icks 1965, pp. 26–27.
- ^ Hunnicutt 1996, p. 52.
- ^ a b Hunnicutt 1996, p. 68.
- ^ Hunnicutt 1996, p. 62.
- ^ Hunnicutt 1992, p. 348.
- ^ a b United Shoe Builds Guns For and Against Tanks, Iron Age, October 30, 1941, v. 148, no. 18, p. 95.
- ^ a b Thomson & Mayo 1960, p. 81.
- ^ Thomson & Mayo 1960, p. 87.
- ^ a b Contracts, Iron Age, October 9, 1941, v. 148, no. 15, p. 95.
- ^ Veronico 2014, p. 13.
- ^ Holley, Irving B. Development of Aircraft Turrets in the AAF, 1917-1944, Defense Technical Information Center, 1947, p. 128.
- ^ Veronico 2014, p. 15.
- ^ Veronico 2014, p. 14.
Books
- Hunnicutt, R. P. (1996). Pershing: A History of the Medium Tank T20 Series (2nd ed.). Spearville, KS: Feist Publications.
- Hunnicutt, R. P. (1992). Stuart: A History of the American Light Tank (1st ed.). Novato, CA: Presidio Press.
- Icks, Robert J. (1965). "WW II "Turtle series" of armored vehicles". Armor. 74 (1, January–February).
- Thomson, Harry C.; Mayo, Lida (1960). The Ordnance Department: Procurement and Supply. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of the Army, Office of the Chief of Military History.
- Veronico, Nick (2014). Bloody Skies: U.S. Eighth Air Force Battle Damage in World War II. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books.