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Senior Member
1915 Imperial marked Westinghouse manufactured Mosin
Hello,
I just got back from a man's house where I picked up a nice SMLE for a good price, but had some questions about another gun he had. It is a 1915 Imperial marked, Westinghouse New England
made Mosin. The bolt matches, but at one point did not, arsenal work? Also on the downside are several stock repairs. I could not make a decision because I thought that those downsides may outweigh the imperial marks and the Westinghouse manufacture. He is asking $140, any opinions on the rifle itself, and more specifically, is it original and a good price?
If any other pictures are needed let me know.
Thanks,
Jim
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03-05-2012 08:37 PM
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Senior Member
I just did some research and found that the "E" with arrows looking bolt marking designates a New England
Westinghouse bolt.
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Contributing Member
If the bore is fair or better, buy it. In the northeast, that rifle is going for twice the price. Its not often seen and that looks like a good honest rifle. Good find.
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Senior Member
The bore was dark with strong rifling, but no doubt it had not been cleaned in years so I think it could turn out well. Any ideas about effects on the value due to the bolt renumbering or the stock repairs?
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Really Senior Member
The renumbering is typical of Soviet
repairs. What is remarkable is that another Westinghouse bolt wound up with your rifle. Check all the parts; Westinghouse used half of the alphabet on their inspection marks but all the marks have the arrow. Check the receiver tang; swivels; sight leaf & base; magazine follower & magazine, etc.
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Thank You to Kirk For This Useful Post:
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Senior Member

Originally Posted by
Kirk
Westinghouse used half of the alphabet on their inspection marks but all the marks have the arrow
Would that look like any of these? Might be hard to see, but on the band it looks like an arrow with a letter by it. If you blow the barrel band picture up you can see it much better, I think it is an arrow.
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Senior Member
Would it be worth the $140 even if other parts are not Westinghouse?
Another question: In my first post, above the Imperial eagle, is that a Soviet
mark? From what I have recently read, the SA on the side of the receiver pictured above means the rifle went through Finland
. But in order for that to have happened, the rifle would have been captured by the Finnish as they defended themselves from the Bolsheviks trying to take over Finland in 1917, or taken back to Finland by a Finnish member of the Czarist Imperial Army after the fall of the czar. So, would it have gone through a Soviet arsenal (where the renumbering happened as well) and then ended up captured and in Finnish hands, most likely in 1917?
Last edited by clarkmilitaria; 03-07-2012 at 07:09 PM.
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The SA indicates it was captured by Finn troops most likely during the Winter War in 1939-40 and inspected/repaired and reissued to Finn troops. IMO it's worth the $140, the survival rate for US made Mosin's is bound to be low considering their long service lives. There are examples around that are vet bringbacks from Korea and no doubt some ended up in Vietnam as well. Look at it this way, it was made in the USA
, sold to Russia, saw action against the Germans, more in the Russian
Civil War, carried to Finnland where it was captured and turned against it's former owners and then managed to survive long enough to make the trip back home. Alot of history there. I also have a 1915 Westinghouse thats about 48,000 newer that yours, also a Finn capture.
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Thank You to vintage hunter For This Useful Post:
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Really Senior Member
Very interesting piece. I would buy it.
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Contributing Member
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