"ArmaLite was an infant and an upstart, a company that began as a workshop in the Hollywood garage of George Sullivan, the patent counsel for Lockheed Aircraft Corporation. Sullivan was an engineer fascinated with the possibilities of applying new materials to change the way rifles looked and felt. In 1953, he met Paul Cleaveland, secretary of the Fairchild Engine and Airplane Corporation, at an industry luncheon. The pair talked about lightweight firearms and new ways to manufacture them. Cleaveland mentioned the conversation to Richard Boutelle, Fairchild's president, who was a gun buff, too. Boutelle and Sullivan agreed to collaborate, and ArmaLite was founded in 1954 as a tiny Fairchild division. It hired a former Marine, Eugene Stoner, as a designer. One of the early creations was the AR-15, made at the informal request of an Army general who wanted a prototype rifle that would fire a small, high-speed round. The AR-15 looked like nothing else in military service. It had an aluminum receiver, plastic furniture, and an odd-looking carrying handle. It was thirty-nine inches long. It weighed, when unloaded, roughly 6.5 pounds, about half the weight of an automatic M14. Its appearance — small, dark, lean, and synthetically futuristic — stirred emotions. To its champions, the AR-15 was an embodiment of fresh thinking. Critics saw an ugly toy. Wherever one stood, no one denied the ballistics were intriguing. Stoner had designed a narrow but powerful new cartridge, the .223, for his weapon. The cartridge's propellant and the AR-15's twenty-inch barrel worked together to move a tiny bullet along at ultrafast speeds — in excess of thirty-two hundred feet per second, almost three times the speed of sound."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Pulitzer Prize winnersColumbia University alumniCornell University alumniJournalists from New York (state)
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/C._J._Chivers
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
C. J. Chivers
Christopher John Chivers (born 1964) is an American journalist and author best known for his work with The New York Times and Esquire magazine. Along with several reporters and photographers based in Pakistan and Afghanistan, he contributed to a New York Times staff entry that received the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 2009. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing in 2017. His book, The Gun, a work of history published by Simon & Schuster, was released in October, 2010
12 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by C. J. Chivers →
Related Quotes
"Classified reports from Vietnam were giving the AR-15 high marks and providing a surprise. Reports from the field cla…"
"[Chivers] writes both with technical precision and the humanity that comes with understanding the invariably unhappy …"
"A half-century later, AR-15s and M-16s are made in varied forms by multiple manufacturers, and updated versions, incl…"
"...aimed semiautomatic fire from a competent shooter can be far more dangerous than automatic fire, which is harder t…"
"The main functional difference between the military’s M16 and M4 rifles and a civilian AR-15 is the “burst” mode on m…"
"Many factors determine the severity of a wound, including a bullet’s mass, velocity and composition, and where it str…"
"He is justly lauded as one of the finest war correspondents of his generation..."
"We know this because of the work of C. J. Chivers of The New York Times, also a frequent contributor to Esquire, whos…"
"As Ismay finished his service commitment with the Navy in 2010, he read a New York Times piece detailing the complex …"
"A graduate of Cornell University and the Columbia School of Journalism, Chivers is often referred to as the best war …"