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Legacy Member
Luckily their is a remain of a cartouche on the left side, but unreadable for me because I'm not an expert in cartouches...
If someone has an idea!
Attachment 94751Attachment 94752
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07-29-2018 09:56 AM
# ADS
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Advisory Panel
J.F. Coyle M1903 Rifles 1906-1907...? U.S. Inspectors Markings
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Legacy Member
Excuse me Jim, Is this the M.JF Coyle inspector mark? the barrel is 11-09 dated....
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Legacy Member
And here, the barrel marking.
So finally, could this rifle be 99% original?
regards
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
donki1967
could this rifle be 99% original
It could be but this far downrange would be a reach. I'd expect something like this to have been assembled by someone along the way. Depends on where you found it and how much of that goes on over where you are. Others will be along to give you better opinions about originality. I just wouldn't be too hopeful yet.
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Actually, if you got the information from Brophy, he is incorrect, J.F. Coyle inspected M1903s off and on through the early 1930s.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
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Legacy Member
Late J F C cartouche
Not common to find, this late SA JFC cartouche from the 1930'sAttachment 94927
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Advisory Panel
if you got the information from Brophy,
No Rick, it's from a site here... U.S. Inspectors Markings Don't know whose site...
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Legacy Member
here are two more corrections to update the U.S. Inspectors Marking list:
RS Robert Sears also inspected Winchester M1
rifles in 1941 and most important SPG is Stanley S. P. Gibbs who inspected M1 rifles 1938 to 1940 and rebuilds 1947 to 1951
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
RCS
here are two more corrections
That's not very handy then, a list that's wrong.
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