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Original Items: Only One Grouping Available. This is a fantastic grouping perfect for the BAR gunner that is missing his kit! All pieces appear to be in original, unmodified, condition, and show signs of honest use and storage wear that has accumulated over the last several decades. Most will have additional issue markings added at the arsenal or by the soldiers in various places.
The United States Army in World War II had a distinct advantage over the Axis when it came to equipment. Both in terms of quality and quantity the power of American industry kept the GI’s well supplied.
For a Soldier, equipment is a matter of survival. Even something as simple as a button can make the difference between victory and defeat if it fails to function properly at the wrong time. For this reason Soldiers have a strong tendency to become attached to equipment they like, and to modify or discard equipment they find unreliable or useless. Among the Infantry, who have to carry their equipment wherever they go, this tendency is even stronger.
Soldiers must carry everything they need for combat operations with them at all times. Individual load carrying equipment is designed to allow the Soldier to carry a basic load of ammunition, food, water, and first-aid gear. The exact make-up of this load varies from conflict to conflict. In more modern times the load has grown to include additional equipment such as gas masks, maps, compasses, and radios. Because of the cost of replacing equipment for Soldiers is high, equipment is usually replaced in phases, with front-line troops receiving the new equipment first. Support units typically receive equipment later as older equipment wears out or becomes obsolete. Because of this, Soldiers in World War II went to war using several different versions of the basic load bearing gear.
This Is Just A Few Of The Items They Carried Featured In This Grouping:
- M1928 Field Pack Haversack, Meat Can Pouch, Messkit With All Utensils and M1943 Entrenching Tool and Carrier: Now this is an incredible, near complete setup! The mess kit pouch is British-made and the haversack has a stenciled name, SCIARAFFA, A, a good research project.
Markings and Dates Present:
- Haversack: LANGDON TENT & AWNING CO 1943
- Meat Can Pouch: BRITISH MADE M.E. CO 1944
- Messkit: KNAPP MONARCH CO. 1944
- E-Tool: Ames 1945 / Carrier: LUB PROD. Co. 1944
-M-1918 BAR M-1942 Ammunition Belt, First Aid Pouch With Bandage, M1942 Canteen with cover and cup, and Cattaraugus 225Q “Commando” Fighting Knife in Sheath: Another wonderful set up that was the basis of loadout carried by the designated B-A-R gunner.
Marking and Dates Present:
- M1918 B-A-R M1942 Ammunition Belt: CHARLES F. CLARK INC. 1942.
- WWII M1942 Canteen with Cover & Cup: Cover is JEFF. QMD 1945 with a name, canteen is SM CO. 1944.
- Cattaraugus 225Q “Commando” Fighting Knife in Sheath: Cattaraugus 225Q on ricasso.
- Leather Pouch - B.D.R. 4-42.
- M1942 First Aid Pouch With Unopened Bandage: The pouch is marked B.B.S. Co. 1943 and the bandage is a Carlisle Model by Guild Products & Co.
The four included BAR Magazines are stamped on the slanted bottom 5564076 / A.
A lovely group of items that come ready for further research and display.
Browning understood the need for a walking fire weapon and developed one that was shoulder fired. It should be noted that at the same time it should be noted that he was also working on the designs for the Browning .30 caliber machine-gun, the M1917 water cooled machine gun that greatly improved on the widely used Maxim design that was already responsible for untold deaths during the First World War.
That shoulder fired weapon was the Browning Machine Rifle, a weapon that ended up being a little more than a traditional automatic rifle but a little less than a light machine gun. Chambered for the .30-06 Springfield rifle cartridge, the weapon was designed to be carried by infantrymen in an assault. Following demonstrations to Congress in Washington, D.C. in 1917, the weapon underwent tests with the U.S. Army Ordnance Department at the Springfield Armory.
American military planners liked what they saw and the BMR was unanimously recommended for immediate adoption. To avoid confusion with the Browning M1917 machinegun the BMR was re-designated M1918 or more officially “Rifle, Caliber .30, Automatic, Browning, M1918.” It was otherwise known as the Browning Automatic Rifle – BAR. Despite what some re-enactors today may suggest or what video games may imply it was never called a “bar” but rather was spelled out phonetically, “B-A-R.”
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This product is not available for international shipping.
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- High Capacity Magazine Laws & Restrictions
Due to State & Federal law we do not ship magazines that exceed the following capacities to the following locations:
California - 10 round maximum for all magazines.
Colorado - 15 round maximum for all magazines.
Connecticut - 10 round maximum for all magazines.
Hawaii - 10 round maximum for all magazines.
Illinois - 15 round maximum for Chicago and Aurora. 10 round maximum for Oak Park and Cook County.
Maryland - 20 round maximum for all magazines.
Massachusetts - 10 round maximum for all magazines
New Jersey - 15 round maximum for all magazines.
New York- 7 round maximum for all magazines.
International- No gun magazines can be exported from the USA.
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