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Need help identifying marks
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08-08-2009 11:38 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Legacy Member
S:
Welcome to the Forum.
Someone, not the military, has placed the insignia of the 32nd Infantry Division on your stock. Here is what it looks like:

The other marking says "Buna". This is an apparent reference to the bitter campaign at Buna, New Guinea which the 32nd participated in during late 1942.
I hope that information is helpful to you.
Regards,
Charlie Flick
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Troops were not allowed to carve up their issue weapons. Ever heard of an Article 15? Done after the war.
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Thank you, that is certainly more than I found out. I wouldn't think they would allowed anyone to destroy government property either. Do you think someone carved this as a tribute or personal association?
The price I paid and the circumstances wouldn't warrant any kind of monkey business. I actually had to ask (the same question I ask at every garage, estate and moving sale), "do you have any guns or guitars?" After I assured her it was not illegal to sell a gun, she went and got "dad's rifle", and said $100.00 firm. Cheapest 30-06 I ever bought.
BTW the serial# is 1,390,xxx and I can't find it anywhere.
Last edited by slayerz; 08-09-2009 at 08:04 PM.
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Dan Wilson
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Actually trench art was quite common in the two world wars, legally accepted or not.
Ernie Pyle did a piece on rebuilding rifles and talks about all the "art" on rifles coming in and even talks about a stock that had a woman's photo embedded in the stock on an M1
under Plexiglas.
I would bet that its some soldiers art on this rifle and not some bubba downtown that did it.
Dan
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