Spandau arsenal

Spandau Arsenal was the center for development of military small arms for Imperial Germany from the Industrial Revolution until 1919. Similar to the United States' Springfield Armory, Spandau engineered and tested improved infantry weapons, but lacked the production capacity to arm the number of soldiers mobilized in wartime.

History
The Royal Prussian Rifle Factory was established on the river Havel at Potsdam in 1722 by Frederick William I of Prussia. The facility was leased to private manufacturers until machinery was moved upstream to the confluence with river Spree in the westernmost Berlin borough of Spandau about 1850. Early arsenal operations were east of the Spandau Citadel, but the arsenal later expanded into the Renaissance fortress. Spandau became the focus of government small arms production through the Second Industrial Revolution until the arsenal was demilitarized by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. Following demilitarization, arsenal machinery was used for manufacture of civilian goods by the state owned conglomerate Deutsche Werke AG. By the 1930s, the arsenal became a laboratory for development of organophosphate insecticides. The citadel became a museum following World War II.

Firearms production
Weapons manufactured at Spandau included:
 * Dreyse needle gun
 * Mauser Model 1871
 * Gewehr 1888
 * Gewehr 98
 * Luger pistol
 * MG 08