Please find below a synopsis of an
article that appeared in SHOOTING TIMES Magazine, December 2001 issue,
entitled "Beretta Celebrates 475 Years of Gunmaking," by Dick Metcalf,
Technical Editor.
What is astonishing about this article
is that a company should be in business for 475 years and owned by the
original family which began the company in 1526 A.D. To a great extent
this says something important about the gene pool from which the founders
came, as well as the craftsmen who turned out the finished product.
Perhaps Mr. Metcalf summed it up rather succinctly when he said, "The Beretta
family has been making guns for nearly five centuries, a history unequaled
by any other manufacturing company of any kind in the world."
To some extent the reporting of this
fact is somewhat controversial because, as with all cultures, the Italian-American
culture has its supporters of the Second Amendment of the U.S. Bill of
Rights and those who are not supportive of firearms in general. With
that aside, however, I believe we should focus on the fact that an Italian-family
and its craftsmen (and now, craftswomen as well) have been able to perpetuate
a company for "nearly five centuries, a history unequaled by any other
manufacturing company of any kind in the world." No small feat!
It is even a greater feat when we realize that here in the U.S., it is
currently reported, that our manufacturing has dropped 75%, but I'm sure
this company survived many such economic downturns, not to mention the
tumultuous upheavals of regional and world wars, and is still vibrant and
profitable today.
The company began during the time
when "Michelangelo takes a well-deserved break between the completion of
the Sistine Chapel ceiling and beginning the work on "The Last Judgment"
by designing fortifications for the Medicis' Kingdom of Florence.
In the small village of Gardone Val Trompia, in the northern provinces
near Milan, one Bartolomeo Beretta, maestro de canne, on October 3rd receives
a commission of 296 ducats from the Senate of the Republic of Venice for
the manufacturing of 185 arquebus barrels. 'Maestro de canne' --
master gun maker."
"Thus did history first take official
notice of the surname Beretta, the greatest family of armsmakers the world
has ever known. Though local records from that period are scant,
we know that Bartolomeo was born before 1498 and was independently established
as a maker of cannon barrels by 1520. Bartolomeo's son Jacomo followed
him into the family business. As did Jacomo's sons Lodovico and Giovannino.
Lodovico set up a separate branch of the family enterprise in nearby Brescia,
manufacturing gun locks, while Giovannino established his own barrel-making
works in Gardone parish."
"The Venetian Republic chose Beretta
products in 1526 after a review of competing samples (perhaps very much
like the process that would result in Beretta's selection as the official
U.S. military sidearm half a millennium later). And as the Beretta
name became synonymous with uncompromising quality, design, materials,
construction, and performance, word spread beyond the Italian borders,
establishing a tradition that has carried down through 15 generations of
the family."
"The history of the Beretta family
and company would fill volumes -- or at least a book as weighty as the
385-page WORLD OF BERETTA: AN INTERNATIONAL LEGEND written by distinguished
firearms historian Larry Wilson and published by Random House to commemorate
the company's 475th year. Filled with Beretta facts and folklore,
lavishly illustrated with many never-before-published photos from the company
and family archives, it is available ($65 retail) through any bookstore."
The article by Metcalf goes on to
sing the praises of the workman/womanship and craftsman/womanship of the
Beretta firearms. A small example of such fine workman/womanship
is illustrated when Metcalf writes: "During the durability test of
12 randomly selected Model 92FS pistols fired at the Beretta USA plant
under Army supervision, the guns went 168,000 rounds without a malfunction.
This makes the Beretta 92 the most thoroughly tested handgun in history,
and the customer-confidence factor engendered by these reliability statistics
is reflected by the growing number of local police, state police, and sheriff's
departments across the U.S. that have adopted the basic Beretta Model 92
design. In 1995 the Beretta Model 96 Brigadier D was developed to
meet the special needs of the U.S Border Patrol and is now being offered
to the consumer market. In the past two years, Beretta USA was awarded
two follow-on military contracts to the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Army Reserve
and National Guard."
"New and innovative handgun products
like the 21st-century Model 9000S and the brand-new ultramodern .22 rimfire
U22 Neos pictured on the cover and discussed in the accompanying interview
with Beretta design engineer Roy Melcher show no indication that the company's
energies have in any way flagged after all its recent expansion.
Beretta today offers the broadest range of products of any of the world's
gunmakers -- from the smallest
personal-defense pocket pistols to
Olympic, gold-medal-winning, high-tech, work-of-art shotguns that have
won more Olympic Games and World Championships than any other brand.
Anybody want to lay odds that Beretta won't go on for a thousand years?"
There you have a short version of
a success story of an Italian-family owned manufacturing company that has
been around longer than any other manufacturing company in existence --
FOR 475 YEARS!!!
Please remember, my genetic brothers
and sisters, just as the Italian name Beretta is amongst the great names
of the world, the Italian name you possess this life reflects the same
genius of that same gene pool, so please do not assimulate the negative
stereotyping unjustly thrust upon our good names by such rot as The Sopranos,
ad nauseam, but rather remember that via the genes within you that you
too can duplicate the words of Robert Browning: "For what are the
stars if our reach does not exceed our grasp." Reach high my genetic
brothers and sisters for you too have been given "long arms" and a great
mind via your ancestry, with which to touch the sky and grasp the stars
therein.
Bob Miriani