It appears that you are you're enjoying our Military Surplus Collectors Forums, but haven't created an account yet. As an unregistered guest, your are unable to post and are limited to the amount of viewing time you will receive, so why not take a minute to Register for your own free account now? As a member you get free access to our forums and knowledge libraries, plus the ability to post your own messages and communicate directly with other members. So, if you'd like to join our community, please CLICK HERE to Register !
Already a member? Login at the top right corner of this page to stop seeing this message.
There were only two military contracts in the inter-War period: Siam and Iraq. The Siamese were dated in Siamese on the right side of the butt socket, using the Buddhist calendar. The Iraqi ones were dated 1936 and 1938 and had the BSA commercial logo AND the unique Iraqi "reversed S" stamp up on the top of the rifle, the butt socket giving only the manufacturer, model and date.
Commercial rifles were available right from the beginning of SMLE production, through to WW2. BSA mde them for sale under their own name and also on contract for many dealers and shops. The W.W.Greener SMLEs were actually built by BSA, marked to and sold by Greener.
Territorial regiments and various Volunteer groups had to supply their own rifles, and many of these came from BSA. Also, they were popular with target shooters and with people who just wanted the toughest rifle that could be built.
Hope this helps.
I found a 1936 BSA in Iraq in 2005. A local had converted it to a punt gun, It must have been from that contract, sadly it was destroyed.