-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
WW1 Brit and American gear. From Peronne Museum.
-
07-30-2014 05:17 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Advisory Panel
Nice gear. Interesting how they show the m1917 rifle as the service rifle when so many are convinced of the M1903. Also they have the sling set up in what I'd call the European style...to the piling swivel. These are set into the floor? Under Glass?
-
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
I do not know. Stumbled across the web site. Google Peronne Museum. Lot of military weapons there.
-
Legacy Member
Though we all think of the '03 Springfield as the standard service rifle of American troops during WW1 - it was - more US troops were issued the M1917 than the '03 since neither Springfield nor Rock Island could produce enough to meet the hugely increased demand.
-
Thank You to gew8805 For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
gew8805
more US troops were issued the M1917 than the '03
Understood, still there were a few Krags made it too. Don't know how long they lasted, I should think they'd have been changed out before deployment...
-
Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member
You are correct, the venerable 30/40 US Krag
was used in training by the Army and was on issue to some US Naval forces. As far as I know, none made it to Europe for even rear line issue by land forces but we learn something new every day.
-
-
Advisory Panel
The only reference I have is a pic of the troops on a train platform and it says" Springfields piled". It shows Krags. Hard to say exactly where the pic is taken.
-
-
Legacy Member
Some things we'll never know.
-
-
Legacy Member
For a discussion of the use of Krags in Europe during WWI I invite your attention to the images and discussion in this thread:
Army unit i.d. marching with Krags in London during WWI?
There is an internet address contained in one post in the thread that goes to a published history of a unit that carried Krags to Europe.
-
-
Advisory Panel
That thread is mostly concerned with canteens and haversacks...slings. It still doesn't confirm how many Krags made it to Europe for WW1. Or even give us an idea for that matter. I do like the general photo though, like one member there says, 'I'd love to have one stack of equipment"... On the other hand, this thread isn't about Krags.
-