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M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sat Oct 22, 2011 11:26 am
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
Had an opportunity to take some pics of my Pop's gear today and this beauty is among the coolest of his collection. It belonged to his dad before him...

Inland mfg./GM M1 Carbine, .30 carbine

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Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sat Oct 22, 2011 7:54 pm
by SHOOTER13
Real nice Inland...

A total of over 6.5 million M1 carbines of various models were manufactured, making it the most produced small arm for the American military during World War II (compared with about 6 million M1 rifles and under 2 million Thompson submachine guns). Despite being designed by Winchester, the great majority of these were made by other companies. The largest producer was the Inland division of General Motors, but many others were made by contractors as diverse as IBM, the Underwood Typewriter Company, and the Rock-Ola jukebox company. Few contractors made all the parts for carbines bearing their name: some makers bought parts from other major contractors or sub-contracted minor parts to companies like Marlin Firearms or Auto-Ordnance. Parts by all makers were required to be interchangeable. Irwin-Pedersen models were the fewest produced, at a little over 4,000. Many carbines were refurbished at several arsenals after the war, with many parts interchanged from original maker carbines.

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sat Oct 22, 2011 8:55 pm
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
As always, thanks for the info Shooter...

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Tue Oct 25, 2011 9:01 pm
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
Did some diggin and the serial number on my Pop's M1 Carbine tracks its manufacture date to somewhere between the months of August and November, 1944.

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 12:29 pm
by SHOOTER13
Nice...!! Here's a rough timeline of events in the months between August to November 1944:

August 1944

1: The Americans complete the capture the island of Tinian.
2: The battle for Guam, another island in the Marianas, however, continues.
10: Guam is liberated by American troops and all of the Marianas are now in American hands. They will be turned into a major air and naval centre against the Japanese homeland.
11: The Warsaw Rising continues; the Red Army remain on the west side of the Vistula, apparently unwilling to help their supposed allies against the occupying Germans.
14: The failure of the Allies to close the Falaise gap in France, proves advantageous to the Germans fleeing to the east who escape the pincer movement of the Allies.
24: 168 Allied airmen arrive at Buchenwald concentration camp.
25: Paris is liberated; De Gaulle and Free French parade triumphantly down the Champs-Élysées. The German military disobeys Hitler's orders to burn the city. Meanwhile the southern Allied forces move up from the Riviera, take Grenoble and Avignon.
28: The Germans surrender at Toulon and Marseilles, in southern France.
28: Patton's tanks cross the Marne.

September 1944

1: Canadian troops capture Dieppe, France, scene of their humiliation in August, 1942.
2: Allied troops enter Belgium
9: The first V-2 rocket lands on London
15: American Marines land on Peleliu in the Palau Islands; a bloody battle of attrition continues for two and a half months.
16: The Red Army enters Sofia, Bulgaria.
17: Operation Market Garden, the attempted liberation of Arnhem and turning of the German flank begins
30: German garrison in Calais surrenders to Canadian troops. At one time, Hitler thought it would be the focus of the cross-Channel invasion

October 1944

1: Soviet troops enter Yugoslavia.
2: Germans finally succeed in putting down Warsaw Uprising by Polish Home Army. The Soviet Union armies have never moved to assist the Polish Home Army.
: American troops are now in a full-scale attack on the German "West Wall".
: Allied forces land on Crete.
14: British troops entering Athens.
: Field Marshal Rommel, under suspicion as one of the "bomb plotters" voluntarily commits suicide to save his family. He is later buried with full military honors.
15: Allied bombardment of Aachen continues, the first major battle on German soil.
23: Battle of Leyte Gulf begins. Largest sea battle in history. Americans experience more kamikaze attacks]] from Japanese aircraft; the USS Princeton is hit with grave damage.
: The battle of San Bernardino Strait; the Japanese attempt to stop MacArthur's landing on Leyte. Small aircraft carriers save the day as Admiral Halsey is lured north out of the action.
: B-29's are now using Tinian Island, in the Marianas, as a base for the systematic bombing of Japan. Soviet forces in cooperation with Tito's Partizan forces, liberated Novi Sad in Yugoslavia (Serbia today)

November 1944

4: Remaining Axis forces withdraw from the Greek mainland. German occupation forces will remain in several Greek islands until capitulation.
British Gen. John Dill dies in Washington, D.C., and is buried in Arlington Cemetery, the only foreigner to be so honored.
5: US planes bomb Singapore, under Japanese control since 1942.
: Zionist terrorists assassinate the British government representative in the Middle East.
6: Franklin Delano Roosevelt wins a fourth term.
: The aircraft carrier USS Lexington is heavily damaged by kamikazes.
9: General Patton's troops and tanks cross the Moselle River and threaten the city of Metz.
10: V-2 rockets continue to hit Britain, at the rate of about eight a day.
12: After numerous bombings while anchored in a fjord at Tromso, Norway, the German battleship Tirpitz is sunk.
17: The Germans give up Tirana, Albania, and the capital is liberated by the Albanian partisans (Allies).
21: San Marino declares war on Germany
20: Hitler leaves his wartime headquarters at Rastenberg, East Prussia, never to return; he goes to Berlin, where he will soon establish himself at the bunker.

That's a fine piece of history your Dad has there...!!

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 6:39 pm
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
Thanks Shooter, great info!

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 8:57 pm
by SHOOTER13
Anytime my friend...

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Oct 31, 2011 7:49 am
by GUNNER_D
I have alway want one of the M1 My father being a WWII vet that would be awesome :)

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Oct 31, 2011 9:29 am
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
Yeah, this one was my grandad's and it's really cool that it's still in the family.

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Oct 31, 2011 2:56 pm
by GUNNER_D
COOL

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Sun Dec 18, 2011 11:09 pm
by Shrapnel
They work on prairie dogs too...

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Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 12:04 am
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
I imagine that would make a fine prarie dog popper...

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 7:11 am
by GUNNER_D
Im wondering why anyone would use a 30 carbine on prarie dogs?

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 11:05 am
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
...because they can...

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 11:55 am
by GUNNER_D
But Why

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 12:19 pm
by LAZY EYED SNIPER
Why not?

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 4:20 pm
by GUNNER_D
Can you eat them? I like a little more of a challenge.:D :) :mrgreen: :lol:

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 8:58 pm
by Shrapnel
I'll bet you shoot beer cans and don't eat them...

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 10:23 pm
by GUNNER_D
Good Answer :lol:

Re: M1 Carbine

PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 11:05 pm
by GUNNER_D
A friend of mine his dad went out to wyoming back about 12 years ago on a Prarie dog hunt to test out the new 17HMR for a report(no one knew of the 17 back then)Thats the only reason all the dumb questions on the parie dog hunt Shrapnel it just brought back some memories hope you all understand.