Thirty-one years before the United States military adopted the the M9 Beretta as its primary service pistol, Smith and Wesson designed and submitted a 9mm double action pistol for military trials. The year was 1954 and the pistol was the Smith and Wesson Model 39. Borrowing heavily from the German P38 pistol, which impressed its US counterparts, the Model 39 was used by various law enforcement agencies, adopted by the SEALs in Vietnam as the infamous “Hushpuppy” (see ) and later served as the basis for the iconic ASP Pistol designed by Paris Theodore- a revolutionary compact handgun that incorporated many ideas that are common to contemporary defensive handguns. The first Model 39s had steel frames and slides. Later, the steel frame was replaced with an aluminum alloy. “Asp 9” by Mr Vladamir – Own work.

Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 via Commons – I was first bitten by the ASP (and Smith 39) bug in the 1994 when my friend handed me the coolest pistol I had ever seen. The smooth lines, transparent grips and unique guttersnipe sight left a lasting impression of the ASP. So lasting, that I am getting ready to build an ASP clone. As part of that process, I picked up the used Smith and Wesson Model 39-2 shown here. The 39-2 is like the 39, except it has a different extractor that uses a coil spring. While the gun I purchased has an aftermarket nickel finish, factory nickel guns were available, and demand a premium nowadays. Once you get past the crude machine work, the Model 39 points and handles well.

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The double action trigger, single column magazine and slide mounted safety and decocker makes for a nice handling pistol. Unlike more modern designs, the shooter’s hands sit lower over the bore axis and the sights are somewhat rudimentary by today’s standards.

That said, the gun shoots well, and was 100% reliable with the 200 rounds of 147 Bonded JHP’s I fired through it. The single column 8 round magazine helps provide the shooter with a comfortable grip. The double action trigger on this pistol was 11 pounds 11 ounces, and the single action trigger broke at 5 pounds 3 ounces. Disassembled 39-2 slide. Note the one locking lug on the straight, non-tapered barrel.

Smith wesson model number guide

This is a secured by a barrel bushing (above, right) that is locked in place by the guide rod. Left hand view of the slide, note the location of the safety/decocker lever. The alloy mainspring housing of the Model 39-3.

Note the sloppy fit against the frame, especially by the beavertail. The machine work on these early Smith and Wesson pistols was crude at best. This is the front of the slide, not the tooling marks. The barrel bushing is reminiscent of the 1911. Instead of locking against a plug like the 1911, the Smith 39 and 39-2’s bushings lock in place with the end of the recoil spring guide rod.

A view of the rear sight, note the large slide cut. I liked shooting the Smith and Wesson 39-2. This target was shot at 7 yards, double action from the ready position. While the design is over 50 years old, the Smith and Wesson 39 design doesn’t seem so dated. It is still a serviceable pistol that is remarkably current despite it’s age. I asked an established instructor for a well known and respected federal agency his thoughts on the Model 39 and 59. This is what he told me.

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The Model 39 was largely ignored by law enforcement for the first decade or so of its existence: it wasn’t a revolver. Pistols were considered “unreliable”, “accident prone” and the 9mm in particular “under powered”. Considering that FMJ ammo was the only game in town at the time for the 9mm, the “under powered” statement was not too far off the mark – but so was the standard.38 Special 158 grain RNL round. A significant number of law enforcement agencies issued the.357 Magnum revolver, and it’s 158 grain SWC bullet of the era was marginally more effective. The few police that took to the Model 39 were mostly plainclothes men – the flat profile, and greater capacity (9 versus 6) they found meaningful. Likewise the civilian market never really warmed up to it.

American pistoleros were 1911 shooters, with some Browning HP aficionados taking the minority. Small pistols were Walther PP series and Baby Brownings.

That’s it folks. The S&W Model 39 suffered from small caliber for a large size gun, an odd non-1911 grip, and clickety-clackety DA/SA trigger action that had little appeal to either the target shooter or the plinker. CCW was not nearly as prevalent back then as it is today – in 1959 very few states had “shall issue” carry laws. Even where allowed, few people carried guns for personal protection on a regular basis, as random violent crime was not as common as it is now, and “terrorism” was a non-event. “Active shooter” was not even a term – social control and personal restraint were far more pervasive. And the places that you NEEDED to carry a firearm – New York City and Chicago – prohibited it.