I toted one through 4 years High School ROTC, never got to fire a real shot with it then or since. I did get an "M-1 thumb" once though and cleaned it many times.
Steve W
Steve W
During planning for the invasion of Japan, the Brits insisted on participating. MacArthur didn't really want them, but was overruled.Star: The rifle in the case mentioned above is a lend lease weapon with British proofs. It also has the fairly rare very early "flush nut" rear sight.
My understanding is that although the Brits had a decent number of M1s (and M1917s) under Lend-Lease, they were mostly held in reserve due to the "odd-ball" .30-06 ammunition required. They had a painted red band around the fore-end to identify them as a different caliber.
The Japanese Navy was so impressed with the Garand that they unsuccessfully tried to copy it. They never quite got it right. Of course by the time the gun went into testing, switching entirely to M-16s or Kalashnikovs wouldn't have saved them.
They [naturally] switched the caliber to 7.7x58mm and dropped the eight round en bloc clip in favor of a ten round fixed magazine loaded with stripper clips.Interesting, I'd never heard that. I learn so much here!