Major General Francis Arthur "One-Arm" Sutton (1884-1944) was an English adventurer and arms dealer, a larger-than-life personality that roamed China and Siberia in the 1920s. He held the license to produce Stokes mortars in China, and supplied arms and expertise to warlord Zhang Zuolin of the Fengtian clique. He lost his right hand at Gallipoli while throwing German grenades back at their original owners.
He had developed an improved fuse system for the Stokes mortar, which garnered him a small fortune, and tried his hand at gold-mining in Siberia before his operation was overrun by the Bolsheviks, earning them his enmity for years to come.
In 1932, he designed the "Sutton Skunk," an armored tractor/mortar carrier (so named because "the heavy guns are in the rear"); while he had some plans to try and sell it to the Chinese warlords, by this point Zhang Zuolin had been assassinated and Sutton considered all of the other warlords to be poor imitators of Zhang. He also saw increasing German influence among the remaining Chinese warlords, which he found distasteful following his experiences in the Great War.
Ultimately, Sutton's story ends in a Japanese internment camp in Hong Kong during the Second World War in 1944, age 60.
Copplestone Castings offers a figure of Sutton in its "European Advisors" pack in the Back of Beyond range, along with a couple of other unique personages from the era. And Company B Miniatures and Models offers a resin and metal kit of the Skunk in 1/56th scale. I painted up both tonight:
The kit's a simple one, consisting of a resin hull, a pair of resin tracks and a metal hatch, along with two pairs of metal Stokes mortars - two folded flat for transport and two set up and ready to fire. I painted it pretty simply - over black primer, I drybrushed Army Painter "Venom Wyrm" pretty heavily, and once dried I washed the full kit with "Strong Tone" shade from Army Painter. Once that dried, I gave it a follow-up dry brush of Venom Wyrm to bring the detail back out. Tomorrow I'll go back in with some black and clean up the tracks.
While the Skunk was never put into production (and only a single photograph attests to the existence of even a prototype, built over the skeleton of a borrowed Holt tractor), it represents too good a story not to include in games set in the Back of Beyond. To that end, I've got some Chinese Warlord decals arriving tomorrow, which I'll apply to mark the Skunk as being in the service of the Fengtian clique. The Copplestone Chinese warlord figure, which I have primed and awaiting my attention at some point over the coming months, does appear to be based on photos of Zhang Zuolin; it only takes a *little* massaging of the timeline to have Sutton put a Skunk into Zhang Zuolin's possession.
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Unfortunately the kit doesn't come with the forward-facing machine guns...and holy shit, was the intent to fire mortars from inside the cab? Goodbye driver's eardrums! |
All in all, a charming little kit of an oddball tankette, and one I'm excited to be able to put on my table at some point. Sutton himself is an interesting man, and I did manage to get my hands on a battered old copy of General of Fortune, a biography of him written by Charles Drage; the biographical information above is taken from Wikipedia and a few other websites, but I'm looking forward to reading his full biography.
Figures Acquired in 2025: 199
Figures Painted in 2025: 164
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