I was at a small local gun show this afternoon and I saw what I thought was an interseting Rock Island M1903. It had a serial number of 388,xxx (not trying to hide the number, I was just interested in the first 3 digits to see it it was low number or high and didn't really notice the last three) with a SA 2/26 barrel. What was interesteding is that it had a very nice stock with only a single rear sock bolt. It had a circle P behind the trigger guard, and you could see where the original inspection mark was but between my eyes and the show lighting I could not make it out. No other markings. The handguard had a straight slope, neither convex or concave. Most of the other parts looked pre WW 2 except for the bold which was Smith Corona and the butt plate which was Remington.

I know Springfield built rifles in the late twenties using Rock Island receivers (I have a 417,xxx Reck Island reciever with a 2/29 SA barrel), but where did this single bolt stock came from? I know Springfield started using a front stock bolt around 1917. Is this possibly a stock they got from Rock Island and therefore is original, or did it just get it during the rebuild that gave it the Smith Corona and Remingtom butt plate?

They were asking $695 and I was tempted to buy it just for the stock, but I resisited.
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