Texas Star
US Veteran
Steve-
I have a No. 4 MKII service rifle in military configuration, not a sporterized one. It has the usual electro-penciled info on the left of the receiver, showing that it was made at Fazakerly Arsenal in 1952.
Conditon is NRA VG Plus to Excellent. I don't think it's been refinished, and there are no markings to indicate a Factory Thorough Repair. (FTR) It has a rack number on the butt, in white paint. I assume that it was issued in some military or police force, somewhere.
But it has no butt socket marking with GR or EIIR or anything elsewhere, nor does the serial number appear on the other side of the socket.
My other No 4 was a Savage-Stevens No. 4 MK I*. Like most of those, it was stamped US Property, as a Lend-Lease rifle. It didn't have any markings with a crown or a monarch's initials, but it was probably not officially deemed British property, so that wasn't surprising.
I handled a No. 4 Savage with Union of South Africa markings some years ago, but that probably didn't have any Crown markings, either.
Did No. 4 rifles not have the butt socket markings with crown and monarch's initials, as did the No. I and older rifles and carbines? Or is there just something odd about my No. 4 MK II not having those?
I'm thinking I may have a rifle made for Ireland, India, or some other nation that ordered them from Enfield, but did not want British ownership markings on them. It would have been ordered new, not as British surplus.
I'm asking Steve, as he is a former Brit and knows these rifles pretty well. But if others here have non-Savage No. 4 rifles, do they have the butt socket markings? Did the Long Branch rifles have those, or just Canadian markings?
I used to know this stuff, but seem to have forgotten.
My rifle looks fully serviceable, as if it might still reside in an official arms rack. It isn't beaten up or refinished. The lack of socket markings surprised me when I looked for them today. Never thought about it before, I guess. I've owned it for 15-20 years, having bought it at a gun show.
If I've fired it (I think I have), it was with Winchester commercial 180 grain hunting ammo. (I still have some of that box.) No problems with functioning, but I think I just shot at cans and clods of dirt, so can't report on accuracy as if I shot it for groups at the bench.
I have a No. 4 MKII service rifle in military configuration, not a sporterized one. It has the usual electro-penciled info on the left of the receiver, showing that it was made at Fazakerly Arsenal in 1952.
Conditon is NRA VG Plus to Excellent. I don't think it's been refinished, and there are no markings to indicate a Factory Thorough Repair. (FTR) It has a rack number on the butt, in white paint. I assume that it was issued in some military or police force, somewhere.
But it has no butt socket marking with GR or EIIR or anything elsewhere, nor does the serial number appear on the other side of the socket.
My other No 4 was a Savage-Stevens No. 4 MK I*. Like most of those, it was stamped US Property, as a Lend-Lease rifle. It didn't have any markings with a crown or a monarch's initials, but it was probably not officially deemed British property, so that wasn't surprising.
I handled a No. 4 Savage with Union of South Africa markings some years ago, but that probably didn't have any Crown markings, either.
Did No. 4 rifles not have the butt socket markings with crown and monarch's initials, as did the No. I and older rifles and carbines? Or is there just something odd about my No. 4 MK II not having those?
I'm thinking I may have a rifle made for Ireland, India, or some other nation that ordered them from Enfield, but did not want British ownership markings on them. It would have been ordered new, not as British surplus.
I'm asking Steve, as he is a former Brit and knows these rifles pretty well. But if others here have non-Savage No. 4 rifles, do they have the butt socket markings? Did the Long Branch rifles have those, or just Canadian markings?
I used to know this stuff, but seem to have forgotten.

My rifle looks fully serviceable, as if it might still reside in an official arms rack. It isn't beaten up or refinished. The lack of socket markings surprised me when I looked for them today. Never thought about it before, I guess. I've owned it for 15-20 years, having bought it at a gun show.
If I've fired it (I think I have), it was with Winchester commercial 180 grain hunting ammo. (I still have some of that box.) No problems with functioning, but I think I just shot at cans and clods of dirt, so can't report on accuracy as if I shot it for groups at the bench.
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