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04-11-2024 03:52 PM
# ADS
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The Home Guard Rosses are some of the best preserved Ross Rifles in existence today. I have an Essex County Home Guard MkIII serial #14253 in my collection also with an unpinned bolt and a tight commercial chamber.
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HG rifles tend to be in either respectable original condition, or sported. They exhibit all early Mk. III features; no reason for later modifications to have occurred.
Mine is stamped HG100. No idea what that signifies. I suspect it is unfired since manufacture - no primer ring on the bolt face, no brass marks in the magazine.
Last edited by tiriaq; 04-12-2024 at 09:56 AM.
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Originally Posted by
Sapper740
I have an Essex County Home Guard MkIII serial #14253 in my collection also with an unpinned bolt and a tight commercial chamber.
Isn't that nice. Spent it's time in stores and then out guarding our side of the Detroit bridge...or the gate at Chryslers.
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Originally Posted by
Sapper740
The Home Guard Rosses are some of the best preserved Ross Rifles in existence today. I have an Essex County Home Guard MkIII serial #14253 in my collection also with an unpinned bolt and a tight commercial chamber.
Beautiful rifle Sapper. Mine very obviously was not someone’s prized possession, but that may have been its saving grace too. And it shoots like a house on fire. Took a guess at a load yesterday and wound up at 2/5 touching and a bit over an inch in total. Very happy with that.
They may not have served in WWI, or been part of the great Ross debacle, but a MkIII that came off the commercial line fits perfectly with the rest of my collection.
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Isn't that nice. Spent it's time in stores and then out guarding our side of the Detroit bridge...or the gate at Chryslers.
And kept the German
sympathizers Charles Respa and Albert Kaltschmidt from blowing up the Windsor Armoury.
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