I got the M1 out of the safe to check the SN. It is indeed #44393. So it looks like the receiver was made in June 1940.
Ummm.... I think you're a bit confused. The Mp44 was not a 9mm it was a 7.92Kurz. It had an effective range of 250 - 300 yards in a cartridge that is SIGNIFICANTLY superior to the .45ACP in terms of ballistics and muzzle energy at all ranges. The 7.92 Kurz out of an STG-44 is carrying more energy at 300 yards than a .45ACP has at the muzzle.
You may be thinking of the MP-40 which entered service in 1940.
The M1 Gun has an excellent thumping factor.
Able to lift a man up off his feet and knock him down, it along with the Automatic Pistol, Caliber .45, M1911, were what stopped the filthy Nazi and Japanese advance during the WW-II.
It is The Greatest Battle Implement yet devised according to Doug McArthur. Great gun and better than any AR16 poodle shooter .22!
The quote was from General Patton. The M1 Garand was in service about 25 years. The M16 Poodle shooter has been in service about 55. Something must be right about it. In the Gulf, when a bigger bullet with more range was called for, they pulled out M14s, not Garands. I have both and love them both.
I was thinking MP44. But I'd still rather have 8 shots of 30-06 if I was shooting at somebody from any real distance. I have never heard or even seen anybody say anything negative about the combat effectiveness of the M1 Garand. The Japanese even tried to copy it towards the end of the war, and from what I have read about the STG44, Hitler was asked to approve it for combat use much earlier than 1944, but he felt the K98 was up to the task. By the time it began to be ushered in, the tide had turned in the war. Patton called it the greatest battle implement of all time. I figure he knew more about it then anybody here did. And Korea was only 5 years after WW II ended so I doubt there was much progress in weapon technology that made something else a better option. Only improvement to the M1 that I would like to have seen came to be when the M14 was adopted. Detachable magazines in battle are a big plus, but I've also read that the brass did not want magazines for fear of soldiers wasting ammo. Guess I can see that as the generals who made that decision were coming from a time of bolt action weapons.
Thread has gotten a bit off course. The OP asked if there were fans of the M1. Pretty much everybody here either has one or wants one. It is my all time favorite rifle. Not some mass produced AR pattern rifle, but an actual issued rifle to American soldiers. One of mine was produced in 1944. Where has it been? Was it carried across Europe? Was it there when a concentration camp was liberated? Or did it stay in the states at some basic training post teaching other Americans to go to war? Who knows? It has more heart and soul then any AR or AK clone ever did or will. And truth be told, it is still capable of defending my home since I have no fantasies of zombie apocalypses. I sold an AR to fund my second one and didn't regret it a bit. Both my M1's, along with my CMP 1911, would be my last guns to go, period.
I love them both like which child is your favorite. Situation is,,, ammo is cheaper and optics are more agreeable on the AR. If the gun grabbers have their way, the AR is a goner, the M1 and SKS top loaders will still be with us
Ammo is surely cheaper. Then again I shoot my M1's once a year. Maybe 150 rounds or so. It's the pride of ownership and experience in shooting it that I love about them. Sure, I shoot my AR more. But it doesn't bring me the pleasure the M1 does when I fire it. And I never had a small crowd of admirers around me at the shooting range when I fire my AR. The M1 surely draws a crowd.
Agree fully. There is a satisfaction from shooting a M1. When my eyes were better and my hands more steady I made some great off hand shots that were crowd pleasers. I'm looking forward to shooting some Garand matches this year.
These days for me the optics in the AR make it more competitive. As said above I took a 160lb wild hog with my M1. I wouldn't try it with a 5.56. With a good shot from a 308 it didn't flinch but dead within feet
Gun shops locally are closed, no gun shows, the trap club is closed, staying home for the past several weeks and got caught up on my to do list. Finely got around to putting wood bases on a couple of paper weights.