Georgy Shpagin

Georgy Semyonovich Shpagin (Георгий Семёнович Шпагин; April 29 1897 - February 6 1952) was a Russian weapons designer. He is best known as the creator of the famous PPSh-41 submachine gun, as well as working with Vasily Degtyaryov on the DShK heavy machine gun.

Early life
Shpagin was born in 1897 to a peasant family in Klyushnikovo close to Kovrovo, in what was then the Russian Empire. He attended school for three years, before becoming a carpenter at the age of 12 (in 1909). He was drafted into the Russian Army in 1916 to fight on the Eastern Front. He was assigned to repair artillery the following year.

Russian Revolution
During the Russian Revolution, he became a member of the Red Army, and worked as a gunsmith in Vladimir Oblast. After 1920, he worked in a workshop designing weapons in the same area, working with Vladimir Grigoryevich Fyodorov and Vasily Degtyaryov.

Creations
In 1938 his workshop released the DShK heavy machine gun, after a decade and a half of unsuccessful attempts at weapon creation. It is still in widespread use as an anti-personnel, an anti-aircraft gun, and a light anti-tank weapon to this day. About 8,000 of them were made during the Second World War. In 1940, he came up with his most accredited design, the PPSh-41 sub-machine gun, which became the staple automatic weapon of the Red Army during the Second World War. It was cheap to produce and easy to maintain. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1944.

Post-war
Shpagin was a member of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR from 1946 to 1950. However, he became seriously ill with stomach cancer and it was of this which he died in early 1952.

Honours and awards
Shpagin was awarded the Stalin Prize, 2nd class, in 1941 and the title of Hero of Socialist Labour on 16 September 1945, for "creation of new types of weapons and raising the combat power of the Red Army". He received three Orders of Lenin during the war, in 1941, 1943 and 1945, in addition to the Order of Suvorov, 2nd class, in 1945 and the Order of the Red Star in 1938.

Posthumous recognition
A street in Vyatka is named for him. In both Kovrov and Vyatka there are large public monuments to him.