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Legacy Member
Possible USMC rebuild?
Hello, picked up this 1918 Springfield 1903. Barrel marked 1917. Has a Ra-p stamp and SA rebuild mark. Also has a hatcher hole and electro pencilee bolt(not same serial number as the receiver. thoughts? Was this used in ww1? Ww2? Any actual way to know?
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Last edited by Colonelhogan77; 02-10-2021 at 11:17 AM.
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Thank You to Colonelhogan77 For This Useful Post:
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02-10-2021 10:54 AM
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Advisory Panel
What a nice old rifle, been through a couple of rebuilds. I should think it saw service in WW2 but perhaps not WW1... On the off chance it's all legit and hasn't been put together, it likely saw time in the other places between WW1 and WW2.
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Legacy Member
The B2 bolt, serial number on bolt, Hatcher hole, and the numbered front sight are all good USMC traits. Its hard to be definitive with these things, since all of those traits could have been applied by anyone at anytime, but chances are good it was a USMC rifle.
I wouldn't bet on it having it made it way to France
in WWI. The whispers I hear about the 4th Marine Brigade rifles is that they were dense in the high 500k to low 600k range. That's just conjecture on my end, but that's what I've seen from big time collectors.
Banana Wars and Guadalcanal however are all very possible.
Bottom line, nice rifle!
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Legacy Member
Awesome thank you for the responses. Glad i scored this rifle! I bought it because it was a world war one era 1903. The usmc traits i realized once i got it home and deep cleaned everything.
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Contributing Member
Check under the hood for deep scratches just in front of rear sight. That would add strong confirmation to rebuilding by USMC. Vise marks discussed midway in to this article.
https://usmcweaponry.com/pre-war-wwii-usmc-m1903s/
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Legacy Member
The Marines started using the tool that caused those marks in the 1930s. Marines rebarrel jobs before then won't have the vise marks.
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Legacy Member
These kind of look like vise marks.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
champ0608
The Marines started using the tool that caused those marks in the 1930s.
Also pipe wrenches I think? That was what they referred to in that article.
Last edited by browningautorifle; 02-12-2021 at 04:04 PM.
Regards, Jim
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Legacy Member
Could well be a US Navy issue in that serial range, you should run a SRS check
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