Point Shooting vs. Sighted Fire, a Historical
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argument. An “appeal to
authority” typically goes like this, “My side is right, because (insert name
here) said so, or that’s the way he did it”. One of the most commonly used
appeals to authority among point shooting proponents is that “William Fairbairn
used point shooting and taught it to his men in Shanghai in the 1920’s and
1930’s, and during WWII taught it to American OSS operatives”. All that is
true. One needs to know a bit more about the back story, however, to understand
why Fairbairn used this method and why his reasons are no longer valid. First,
perhaps a bit of history will help put matters into the proper perspective, so
here goes. Shanghai is a port city on the coast of China. At the turn of the 20th century,
European powers forced the government of China to give them control over
certain ports, including Shanghai, where the Europeans built modern enclaves
for their personnel, who oversaw vast trade empires with the Chinese. In
addition to legitimate trade, these ports became centers for the opium trade and human
trafficking. In 1936, Shanghai was one
Shanghai Municipal Police markings
on Colt 1911 pistol made in 1927
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of the largest cities in
the world, with a total population in excess of 3 million. Of those, only about
35,000 were European, but they controlled the city and lived in a modern
settlement with race track, schools, and all the cultural amenities they
desired. To keep order and protect the Europeans (mostly British, French and
German) the Shanghai Municipal
Police were organized and run by the British. During the period of the 1920’s
and 1930’s, there was a great deal of criminal violence, fueled by opium gangs
and other smugglers, gangs that specialized in prostitution and gambling, communist
party organizers, and regular criminal thugs. These groups were in constant
combat with the members of the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP). William E.
Fairbairn joined the Royal Marines Light Infantry in 1901. A few years later he
joined the Shanghai Municipal Police, where he eventually rose to the rank of
Assistant Commissioner. For many years during the period of the 1920’s and
1930’s, he was in charge of all firearms training for the SMP, and also
routinely went on dangerous raids and other operations. This resulted in his
personal involvement in literally scores
of gunfights during his career.
Working with his associate, Eric Sykes, they devised a hand to hand system
known as “Defendu”, as well as a firearms training program for all SMP personnel.
As World War Two loomed in the immediate future, both Fairbairn and Sykes left
Shanghai and returned to England. For the duration of the war, Sykes remained
in England, teaching British Commandoes and members of the Special Operations
Executive (SOE), the British equivalent of our OSS. Fairbairn was sent here to
train US and Canadian Commando forces and operatives from the Office of
Strategic Services
(OSS), the forebear of the modern CIA.
Together, Fairbairn and Sykes wrote a
book called Shooting to Live , first
published in 1942. Paladin Press now offers a re-print of this excellent book,
and it should be in the library of every history conscious gunman. One of
Fairbairn’s students in the OSS was Colonel Rex
Applegate, who wrote extensively about
Fairbairn’s methods, and was largely responsible for propagating Fairbairn’s
teachings in the United States. Usually, if a point shooting proponent uses an
appeal to authority, he will be referencing either Fairbairn, or Applegate. When
one delves a bit deeper into Fairbairn’s experience in Shanghai, including
reading Shooting to Live with a bit more critical eye, a number of disturbing
tidbits of information emerge. First, Fairbairn had a very large force of
officers who were unfamiliar with handguns when they joined the SMP and for
whom he had an extremely limited amount of time and ammunition for training.
Initial training was very brief, and by today’s standards
Colt 1908 Model, showing the pathetic
little sights on guns of the era.
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completely and utterly inadequate.
After initial training, each officer was allotted 36 rounds of ammunition per
year for training and requalification, a pitiful amount by any modern standard.
Initial recruit training was conducted at 2 yards and 4 yards, and the
“qualification” standard was 50% or more hits anywhere on a life-size
silhouette target! Not too impressive. So, how did this training regimen
work on the mean streets of Shanghai?
During the period 1929 through 1938, SMP officers fired a total of 3,329 pistol
rounds in actual engagements with criminals. These 3,329 rounds accounted for
159 suspects killed and an additional 149 suspects wounded. Thus, the SMP
officers fired 10.8 rounds for every criminal casualty they produced. The
completely untrained Chinese bandits, during the
exact same period, fired 789 rounds at
SMP officers, resulting in 19 officers killed and an additional 67 officers
wounded. Thus, the thugs fired 9.2 rounds for every casualty produced. So, the
officers trained in Fairbairn’s point shooting methods were actually less
effective than their untrained criminal foes. This begs the
question, “Why did Fairbairn persist
with such an ineffective technique?” I believe the answer is quite simple, and
can be readily illustrated. The SMP issued all sidearms used by its officers,
and because they had both European (mostly British) officers and smaller
stat-1911’s in .45 and the Oriental officers, who were much smaller, were
issued Colt 1908 pocket Autos in .380. All of these handguns were made by Colt
in the 1920’s and early 1930’s. Fairbairn did not personally care much for the
.380 Colts, but he thought they were the best he could do for Oriental men with
hands far too small to operate a 1911 well. I happen to have one of the SMP’s
1911 pistols, SMP number 233. This is a commercial
Colt Government Model, manufactured in
1928. It has the “Shanghai Municipal Police” roll mark on the frame, and the
Number 233 mark on the frame, slide and barrel. This is a “transitional model”
1911, with some features of the 1911 and some of the 1911-A1. The changes from
1911 to 1911-A1 configuration started in 1927 but many guns built in the next
couple of years were assembled from parts on hand at the factory, and these
transitional models are seen from time to time. I also have a Colt 1908 Pocket
Model like the ones issued by the SMP, although this one did not belong to
them. Both pistols have sights that are abysmal from a shooting point of view.
The front sight is tiny- low and very narrow. The rear sight has a very small
notch, on both the 1911 and 1908 pistols. These sights are all but impossible
to see in anything other than perfect lighting, and it is
very difficult to line them up at any
kind of speed. Contrast the sights on the 1911 and the 1908 with those on my
current carry handgun, a Glock 35. Fairbairn taught point shooting because
the sights on his guns were useless. No further explanation is needed. If
you have sights you cannot see, you learn to point
the gun. Now that modern high
visibility sights are industry standard, it’s time to leave the 1930’s behind.
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