Tag Archives: Lock and Load

Lock and load

OCS classmate Bill Cunningham has finally provided the explanation for this phrase which has puzzled and annoyed me for years. Load and lock, okay. But lock and load? Huh?

I had previously found some good history on it, but it didn’t explain how the term applied to modern assault rifles. Bill harkens back to our days on the firing range at Fort Benning, reminding that we were told to lock our magazines into our rifles, "with that careful, upward tap for safety," and only then load a round into the chamber. Lock and load. Simple. Thanks, Bill.

Lock and load

This war-movie standard phrase has always annoyed me. It even showed up in "Reluctant Lieutenant," a book I’ve been reading, purporting to have been used by sergeants on Basic Training firing ranges at Fort Dix, NJ in 1967. Bothers me, I say, because it’s not obvious to me how one could lock first and then load. But loading first and then locking the rifle’s bolt forward makes sense.

Indeed, the original order was to load and lock and it comes from the M-1 Garand Manual here, the standard rifle of the second world war. But Wikipedia says lock and load also makes sense in terms of locking the bolt back before loading the round into the chamber. In any case, they attribute the current usage to John Wayne in the movie "Sands of Iwo Jima" in 1949. So I suppose it could have been used that way at Dix eighteen years later, and ever since.