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Winchester Model 12 "US and Bomb" marked-1947
Last edited by RMF; 04-01-2012 at 09:45 PM.
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04-01-2012 09:23 PM
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Hello RMF. The serial number of your shotgun is in the same range as the last few thousand Model 12 trench guns manufactured for the Military during WWII. They were made in late 1943 or early 1944. So your shotgun was likely made in that time frame, not in 1947. All of these trench guns had a factory parkerized finish.
From your photos, it appears that your shotgun has been refinished. The serial numbers do not look crisp. And on an original blue finish there would be burnishing around the Winchester proof marks found on top of the barrel and receiver. The fact that there is no Military Ordnance bomb mark on top of the barrel means it was either buffed off when the gun was refnished, or the barrel could be a replacement. The forearm also looks like a later type.
Do you know the date of the barrel? It should be marked on the underside near the receiver.
FWIW, that's the highest US marked serial numbered Model 12 I can recall seeing.
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Thank You to Tom Doniphon For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
Tom Doniphon
Do you know the date of the barrel? It should be marked on the underside near the receiver.
Thanks Tom! On the underside of the barrel it is marked "48". Perhaps this was a new barrel put on in some part of its history?? Let me know if any additional pics of the gun could be helpful in determing its orgins/history.
Beyond the somewhat shallow serial numbers and WP proof I will say the refinish was done very well, edges seems sharp and the grain/texture of the metal is very consistent. It has a very vintage hue to the color- nearly identical to my pre-war Model 61 bluing.
Last edited by RMF; 04-03-2012 at 02:29 AM.
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The stock was cut for a sling swivel. That's an indication that it may have been a trench gun buttstock. The Military guns have inspector's and Ordnance marks on the left side of the buttstock. If there was one, it's probably been sanded away.
I agree. Whoever did the refinish did a nice job.
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Thanks Tom... very helpful information. So looking at data/evidence it sounds like this is what might have happened:
- Originally a M12 Trench gun- Serial number dates it to the last few 1000's trenches made.
- After the war it was refinsihed in a commercial blue, stock swivel inlet filled, and perhaps had a '48' barrel installed.
- At sometime (perhaps at time of refinsh) had the choke added
I have just one last question- looking at the refinsh work I'm suspecting that Winchester might have done the work. If that was the case would Winchester mark a new long barrel with the WP stamp.. or would they mark it with a "P"?
Thanks!
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Here is what I think. This may have been a leftover receiver that Winchester sold after the war as a commercial gun. The serial would be the highest trench ever reported and I dont think for thst reason the. gun was ever released or we would have seen other similar numbers. Or it may have been a surplus trench that someone reworked. But the Winchester marked barrel mskes it interesting.