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03-29-2021 03:17 AM
# ADS
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Winchester 74 and No.42
I'm not at home at the moment so can't take pictures of my rifle but here are some of one of a member's rifle that was previously posted on this forum. Also a picture of the cardboard tube that housed the 53 scopes (it doesn't have a date on it). As a matter of interest where and when was it that the SOE catalogue entry for the scoped Winchester 74 was debunked as a myth? I know that the IWM does have two catalogues - I can't imagine that someone reprinting them would want to insert a spurious entry about a rifle that very few people would know anything about in the first place. Somewhere I have a copy in the ledger for the 660 rifles that were converted by Parker Hale - I'll dig it out when I get home.
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Rifle
The rifle in the picture from an earlier post is mine.
The "Highwoods Fertilisers book" is original. It does not mention anything about firearms.
It does however tell you in its 42 pages how to blow all sorts of stuff up.
I purchased the rifle, book, shoulder flashes, revolver and medal from the son of a known
"stay behind".
Their hide is still visible in the woods just north of Rye in Sussex.
There was talk that the patrol Tommy gun is still around so hopefully one day!
Last edited by 303 Collector; 03-31-2021 at 05:30 PM.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Nigel
I'm not at home at the moment so can't take pictures of my rifle but here are some of one of a member's rifle that was previously posted on this forum. Also a picture of the cardboard tube that housed the 53 scopes (it doesn't have a date on it). As a matter of interest where and when was it that the SOE catalogue entry for the scoped Winchester 74 was debunked as a myth? I know that the IWM does have two catalogues - I can't imagine that someone reprinting them would want to insert a spurious entry about a rifle that very few people would know anything about in the first place. Somewhere I have a copy in the ledger for the 660 rifles that were converted by Parker Hale - I'll dig it out when I get home.
The purported SOE manual is IMHO obviously a cut-and-paste job: the fonts are wrong, the definition is too good, the graphics are pinched from old manuals, the photo would be very unlikely, the text itself is the sort of thing one would find in the most "general interest" book on small arms and is just plain "wrong" for a publication of that type and time, even if one makes the unlikely assumption that S.O.E. ever published such manuals! If they did I suspect it would much more likely be in French
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Originally Posted by
303 Collector
The rifle in the picture from an earlier post is mine.
The "Highwoods Fertilisers book" is original. It does not mention anything about firearms.
It does however tell you in its 42 pages how to blow all sorts of stuff up.
I purchased the rifle, book, shoulder flashes, revolver and medal from the son of a known "stay behind".
Very interesting, thanks for that explanation. Clever how the cover of the booklet gives nothing away about the contents.
Last edited by Surpmil; 04-06-2021 at 03:41 AM.
Reason: Typo
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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Legacy Member
I came across this about a month ago! If you look at an image of the supposed page from the ‘SOE Manual’ as originally captioned in rifleman.org, you will note an asterisk on the title ‘Sniper’s rifle with silencer*’. I ignored that * for years and the editor from rifleman.org can’t track down who originally sent the info But in the Intro to the original point of publication (Melton’s ‘OSS Weapons’ (1991)) it clearly states ‘ Using the [OSS] 1944 catalog as a base, I have updated it to include weapons .. that were being designed and produced up to the very end of the war.... The presence of an asterisk following the item’s name will indicate that this page has been added to update the original 1944 publication’. I have checked the 1945 OSS catalogue and it does not appear there. The book was written before the internet meant that illustrations could be copied without context far and wide. So far, there are 4-5 Aux Units patrols who reported using Win74 and only 2 with No.42 scope - possibly as a trial as one patrol then reported exchanging the No.42 temporarily with a No.32 (which proved too heavy). No evidence that this was a standard configuration and it does not appear in any known Aux Units record (where the only specific record of issue is to Winchester 69).
I do not know where the SOE link came from. Were surviving examples so unusual that it was thought only SOE would use it?!!! There is a distinct risk that Parker Hale made some up, at least, post war from war surplus for commercial resale in the late 1960s/1970s and many ended up in the USA
. So if anyone has ever seen reference to the rifle with No.42 scope in an SOE document, or know of its use in the field then I would be very pleased to hear of it.
Last edited by Malcolm_A; 04-05-2021 at 01:14 PM.
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Contributing Member
The SOE link for a silenced .22 may come from the De Lisle Carbine that was built as a .22 during it's initial development then obviously changed to the .45 before production started.
Personally I wouldn't be too confident about getting a kill shot with a .22!
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
30Three
Personally I wouldn't be too confident about getting a kill shot with a .22!
I agree! And its also for that reason i don't believe it was a legitimate SOE sniping rig.
For the caliber of the rifle it is hardly compact and i don't believe you would be in the field with essentially a training round.
All previous SOE weapons other maybe a palm pistol are usually 9mm or other enemy calibre so ammo can be obtained over enemy lines. Certainly during WW2 there is zero chance of finding .22, and that is the reason the Inglis Hi Power and Welrod were 9mm.
---------- Post added at 06:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:55 PM ----------
This is worth a look, about ⅔ down the page it details the rifle in question and agree's they were more than likely for training purposes.
https://www.rifleman.org.uk/Winchest...er_rifles.html
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
30Three
The SOE link for a silenced .22 may come from the De Lisle Carbine that was built as a .22 during it's initial development then obviously changed to the .45 before production started.
Personally I wouldn't be too confident about getting a kill shot with a .22!
I wouldn't underestimate the .22 It is a favourite for "wet affairs" with certain secret services, and would be quite deadly at 200 yards or more if well placed.
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Surpmil
I wouldn't underestimate the .22 It is a favourite for "wet affairs" with certain secret services, and would be quite deadly at 200 yards or more if well placed.
Interesting results from your research - but the essential points to bear in mind in the possible operational use of the .22 rifle by the Auxiliaries was that they were expected to operate principally at night and if using a rifle to take out a sentry, who unlike your turkey target might be moving, it had to be a kill on the first shot. Add to that equation a scope you couldn’t fully adjust and it does not seem a reliable option! Incidentally their inter-patrol competition shoots were at only 20yds which I think gives an indication of the anticipated useful range- essentially they may have been a token stopgap until arrival of the .32 suppressed Welrod.
Last edited by Malcolm_A; 04-08-2021 at 05:57 PM.
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