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Early Quality with a interesting story
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The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to sakorick For This Useful Post:
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11-29-2011 06:40 PM
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Rick,
That is a great story, but a sad ending.
I’m not being critical, I realize it’s his carbine and he can do with it as he pleases. I think he took a very unique piece of history that was distinct and made it look ordinary. It was in a class of its own and now it’s not.
John
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Originally Posted by
Hercules Powder
Rick,
That is a great story, but a sad ending.
I’m not being critical, I realize it’s his carbine and he can do with it as he pleases. I think he took a very unique piece of history that was distinct and made it look ordinary. It was in a class of its own and now it’s not.
John
Not true! He has the original stock and has a rifle he can shoot. We tried shooting it in the handmade configuration and the handguard kept slipping off. I think Ed has the best of both worlds......a unique piece of Americana and a functional carbine. Regards, Rick.
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Thanks Rick. It's good to know he realizes he has something special. He got a really nice carbine at a very reasonable price.
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That's a very early QHMC. Mine is pretty close and has a 2-43 Rock barrel with many early parts. Curious if yours also has the early script GE Q flip sight. Thanks for sharing.

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Want to sell that one Dave???
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No It wasn't quite right so I stopped at what I thought it was worth as parts. That one does have the early markings on the parts. Very nice. I have a soft spot for the Illinois made guns. Must have been a great state back then with all the war material made here. Now the state is running gun and ammo makers out and complaining we have no jobs.
Off my soapbox now!! Very nice QHMC.
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Along the same lines, a local who was a WWII veteran of the Pacific theater sent a box of stuff back home. After he returned from the Pacific and was in California he told his wife to be on the lookout for a box he was sending home. His wife suspected he was sending something he shouldn't, so when the box arrived by bus she hid it until he returned home. He sent back 3 M1
Carbines, a Model 1911 and a Model 1911A1, and several combat knives. He had a local gunsmith make sporter stocks complete with cheekpiece for the Carbines, and had the Model 1911 nickeled and fitted with MOP grips.
He said he figured that since he made it through the war, sending a few things back home didn't worry him. He boxed everything up in a wooden box, and got a buddy to drive him to a town about 85 miles away to ship his plunder. He also sent back a couple of Japanese
swords, but shipped them from the base.