Seecamp Firearms

Seecamp Firearms grips

Seecamp Firearms (L.W. Seecamp Co.) was founded in 1973 by master gunsmith Ludwig (Louis) Wilhelm Seecamp (1901–1989) and his son Lueder (Larry) Seecamp as a family business in Connecticut

Trained in pre-WWII Germany's technical academy, Ludwig emigrated to the U.S. via Canada in 1959 after WWII service. He worked as a gun designer for O.F. Mossberg from 1959 to 1971 retirement. In 1973, at age 72, he launched the company specializing in his patented (#3722358) double-action conversion for Colt 1911 .45 pistols—creating the world's first commercially available DA .45 autoloaders. Nearly 2,000 conversions were performed through the early 1980s amid the DA vs. SA debate

Key pivot: In 1979, they introduced a telescoping recoil system (patent #4201113 by Larry), now standard in many modern short-recoil pistols

Shifting to original designs post-1968 Gun Control Act import restrictions, Seecamp debuted the ultra-compact LWS-25 (.25 ACP) in 1981—the first U.S.-made stainless steel DAO semi-auto pistol. In 1985, it evolved into the iconic LWS-32 (.32 ACP), maintaining identical tiny dimensions (4.25" long, ~11.5 oz) via chamber-ring delayed blowback, reviving .32 ACP for pocket carry with high craftsmanship and reliability (optimized for Winchester Silvertip HP)

Hand-assembled in limited production, Seecamps earned cult status for precision and deep concealment. Ludwig passed in 1989; Larry continued until selling to Whalley Precision in 2014, relocating to Massachusetts while preserving quality

Today, Seecamp remains a benchmark for premium pocket pistols—legacy of German-trained innovation in American concealed carry