Good evening:
My Long Branch addiction received another fix at a recent auction, and it is an interesting one. It is a 1943 LB which seems to still have its original forewood, C Broad arrow stamped and serialed to the gun. However, it has that black Suncorite coating on it, a BNP proof mark indicating time spent in England, a serial number punched magazine, and the buttstock seems to have British markings and a 1952 date on it, if I'm reading it corectly, and has no C Broad arrow on it. In addition, on the right butt socket just above the factory serial number is a '46, the significance of which I am not certain.
Would it be correct to assume this was sent somewhere or other in 1946, then was refitted in England in 1952 at which point it got a matched mag, new butt and a coating of black, but retained its forewood??? If it were just the butt I would assume it just got that at some depot level as a replacement, but it seems to have been all tarted up at the time. If it was a thorough refit, why would it not then have an FTR stamp on it?
It's in excellent condition, and I expect it will shoot very well. Just curious about its history and why it's got what it does.
Thanks
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