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Contributing Member
9 Oct 2021 Garand Picture of the Day

US troops stop to eat on the road to Agana, the capital of Guam, August 10, 1944. The United States
took control of Guam after the Second Battle of Guam and turned the island into an important strategic foothold in the Pacific theater.
Pvt. William N. Wade, front and center, displays his helmet, punctured by a Japanese
sniper near Barrigada, Guam, to his buddies, members of the Army's 77th Infantry Division, Aug. 23, 1944. From left, front row: Cpl. Harold Boyes of Ohio; Pvt. Wade; Pfc. William Kusch, Bayside, New York. Second row: Cpl. Joseph A. Hargraves of Massachusetts; Pfc. Willard Haus of Endicott, New York; Staff Sgt. Stephen Kelly of Brooklyn, New York; and Pvt. Joe Tremallo of Morristown, New Jersey.
William Nelson, Sr. Wade
20 Aug 1925 - 05 May 1996
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Last edited by Mark in Rochester; 10-04-2021 at 01:44 PM.
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10-04-2021 01:37 PM
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Steve762
an M3 SMG
Wonder if he scammed it from a tanker at some point in a rear area? He'd have great traders for it...
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Legacy Member
Also, web sling on the M1
on the left; usually see them in the European Theater.
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Legacy Member
There are photos of the US Army in France
late Aug 1944 with the M3 SMG. Not that many M3 smg's issued compared to the
Thompson. I always like the Thompson 20 & 30 rd magazines better, smooth feeding too and easy to load. Try loading 30
rounds of 45 acp into a M3 magazine with your fingers even better in the winter. You have to have a M3 mag loader or the
improved M3A1 butt stock to load the magazine
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
RCS
the
improved M3A1 butt stock
I always had the buttstock to help load. I didn't have to load out in the field but it was still flawless to use. Loading bare handed is the same for any single presentation staggered box...almost impossible after a few rounds. Looks like the cocking handle at his fingers, an M3...not A1.
The web rifle sling is the early flat slider, I had a 1944 marked one so it makes sense. Just a new issue...
Last edited by browningautorifle; 10-06-2021 at 10:21 AM.
Regards, Jim
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Legacy Member
They used the M1
carbine sling on the M3 SMG
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
RCS
They used the
M1
carbine sling on the M3 SMG
Yes they did... I think originally the oiler too. Later it went into the pistol grip. The sling I speak of was mentioned on the rifle next to the M3.
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Legacy Member
Jim, Your right, I have a web M1
rifle sling dated 1944 but have seen them dated 1943 too. looks like this outfit got all the new equipment
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
RCS
have seen them dated 1943
I've heard that and heard of them not marked at all but never seen them. I had a 1944 flat slider here for a few years and sold it locally for $100CDN... It was cherry too.
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