Knowledge

M1 Garand

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practice. In reality, this procedure was rarely performed in combat, as the danger of getting debris inside the action along with the cartridges increased the chances of malfunction. Instead, it was much easier and quicker to simply manually eject the clip, and insert a fresh one, which is how the rifle was originally designed to be operated. Later, special clips holding two (8+2=10 for target shooting) or five rounds (to meet hunting regulations) became available on the civilian market, as well as a single-loading device which stays in the rifle when the bolt locks back.
3443: 3159: 2665: 3186: 743: 2687: 3146: 3095: 2624: 2547: 1584:. Full automatic fire was achieved by a connector assembly which was actuated by the operating rod handle. This, in turn, actuated a sear release or trip which, with the trigger held to the rear, disengaged the sear from the hammer lugs immediately after the bolt was locked. In automatic firing, the cyclic rate of fire was 700 rpm. When the connector assembly was disengaged, the rifle could only be fired semi-automatically and functioned in a manner similar to the M1 rifle. The T20 had an overall length of 1552:
results mirrored those of the M1E5's previous testing. The test report found that the modified rifle's muzzle flash, blast, and recoil were all significantly higher than that of the standard rifle. Additionally, it was less reliable, leading to it being declared "totally unsuitable as a combat weapon". Nonetheless, in July 1945, 15,000 short M1 rifles were requested for use by airborne troops. The rifles were supposed to be produced within the next five months, but the procurement was canceled due to the
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Government; in recent years, the CMP has received most of its surplus weapons through such returns from foreign countries. However, all civilian and military firearms imported into the U.S. after January 30, 2002, are required by federal law to have the name of the importer conspicuously stamped on the barrel, slide, or receiver of each weapon. This requirement significantly lowers a military weapon's value relative to those without the importation markings as they distract from its original state.
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they could pull the trigger, without having to move their hands on the rifle and therefore disrupt their firing position and point of aim. The Garand's fire rate, in the hands of a trained soldier, averaged 40–50 accurate shots per minute at a range of 300 yards (270 m). "At ranges over 500 yards (460 m), a battlefield target is hard for the average rifleman to hit. Therefore, 500 yards (460 m) is considered the maximum effective range, even though the rifle is accurate at much greater ranges."
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nearby ready to fire. Due to the often intense deafening noise of combat and gunfire it is highly unlikely any U.S. servicemen were killed as a result of the clang noise; however some soldiers still took the issue very seriously. Some U.S. veterans recalling combat in Europe are convinced that German soldiers did respond to the ejection clang, and would throw an empty clip down to simulate the sound so the enemy would expose themselves.
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also filled with molten lead or solder. Their gas ports or operating system are also welded closed. Their barrels are then welded to their receivers to prevent replacement. Their firing pin holes are welded closed on the bolt face. As a result, they cannot be loaded with, much less fire live ammunition. However, they may still be used for demonstration or instructional purposes.
2404: 1128: 2384: 2268: 1312:, developed during the Korean War. It consisted of a small mechanism installed on the trigger guard, allowing the soldier to remotely pull the trigger by depressing a lever just behind the guard. This enabled the shooter to fire his weapon while using winter gloves, which could get "stuck" on the trigger guard or not allow for proper movement of the finger. 1393: 1385: 1152: 2471:
with U.S. civilian arms dealers. Korea has sold tens of thousands of M1 Garand rifles to the U.S. civilian market between 1986 and 1994. In 2018, the CMP reported they had received a shipment of more than 90,000 M1 Garand rifles from the Philippines and also stated plans to restore many of those rifles for civilian sale.
2914:: A small, but unknown, number of M1, M1C (with infra-red night vision equipment) and M1D rifles were owned by Canada. There were enough to equip a brigade and Garands were issued to certain Canadian Army units near the end of World War II and to some army and Royal Canadian Air Force personnel into the 1950s. 2729:
reached 152,328 (Dec 1950), 189,704 (Dec 1951), 221,079 (Dec 1952), and 266,633 (27 Jul 1953) units. Also used in the early years of the Vietnam War until replaced by a small number of the XM16E1 rifles in 1966 and mostly by the M16A1 rifles in 1968. Finally, the M1s were replaced by license produced
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spokesman said the administration's decision was based on concerns that the guns could fall into the wrong hands and be used for criminal activity. However, in January 2012, the U.S. and South Korea agreed on the sale of 87,000 M1 Garand rifles, and the South Korean government entered into discussion
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T44 variant; was a conventional design developed on a shoestring budget as an alternative to the T47. With only minimal funds available, the earliest T44 prototypes simply used T20E2 receivers fitted with magazine filler blocks and re-barreled for 7.62×51mm NATO, with the long operating rod/piston of
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Ejection of an empty clip created a distinctive metallic "clanging" sound. In World War II, it was rumored that German and Japanese infantry were making use of this noise in combat to alert them to an empty M1 rifle in order to catch their American enemies with an unloaded rifle. It was reported that
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the M1 rifle's semiautomatic operation gave United States infantrymen a significant advantage in firepower and shot-to-shot recovery time over enemy infantrymen armed primarily with bolt-action rifles. The semi-automatic operation and reduced recoil allowed soldiers to fire eight rounds as quickly as
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Contrary to widespread misconception, partially expended or full clips can be easily ejected from the rifle by means of the clip latch button. It is also possible to load single cartridges into a partially loaded clip while the clip is still in the magazine, but this requires both hands and a bit of
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line consisting of rear receiver aperture sight protected by sturdy "ears" calibrated for 100–1,200 yd (91–1,097 m) in 100 yd (91 m) increments. The bullet drop compensation is set by turning the range knob to the appropriate range setting. The bullet drop compensation/range knob
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Modern Garands can be gunsmith built in several novel cartridges, with examples known up to .458 Winchester Magnum. While not common, 6.5×55mm Swedish barrels are occasionally available to convert with nothing more than a barrel change, though the en bloc clips are more difficult to load and often
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Gas cylinder lock valve is removed and the gas system has welds permanently joining the lock and gas cylinder to prevent reversion. Barrel is unplugged but is welded to the receiver. The weapon has been converted from semi-automatic to a repeater and can only fire blanks. The bolt must be cycled to
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are rendered permanently inoperable, unless proper techniques, tools, and replacement parts are used to restore the rifle to safe operation. Their barrels have been drilled out to destroy the rifling. A steel rod is then inserted into the barrel and welded at both ends. Sometimes, their barrels are
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Upon receipt of the PWB rifle, Springfield Armory's model shop fabricated a very similar shortened M1 that was designated as the "T26". One of the more noticeable differences was that the shortened PWB rifle had a cut-down front handguard (secured by an M1903 rifle barrel band), while the T26 rifle
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Despite the concept being shelved at Springfield Armory, the idea of a shortened M1 rifle was still viewed as potentially valuable for airborne and jungle combat use. Particularly in the Pacific Theater, there was widespread dissatisfaction with the M1 carbine's range, power and foliage-penetration
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The procedure required to install the M1C-type mounts through drilling/tapping the hardened receiver reduced accuracy by warping the receiver. Improved methods to avoid reduction of accuracy were inefficient in terms of tooling and time. This resulted in the development of the M1D, which utilized a
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began experiments with clips made of various plastics in order to soften the sound, though no improved clips were ever adopted. Conversely, former German soldiers have said that the sound was inaudible during engagements and not particularly useful when heard, as other squad members might have been
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On August 3, 1933, the T1E2 became the "semi-automatic rifle, caliber 30, M1". In May 1934, 75 M1s went to field trials; 50 went to infantry, 25 to cavalry units. Numerous problems were reported, forcing the rifle to be modified, yet again, before it could be recommended for service and cleared for
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Twenty gas-operated .276 T3E2 Garands were made and competed with T1 Pedersen rifles in early 1931. The .276 Garand was the clear winner of these trials. The .30 caliber Garand was also tested, in the form of a single T1E1, but was withdrawn with a cracked bolt on October 9, 1931. A January 4, 1932
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adopted the M1C as their official sniper rifle in 1951. This USMC 1952 sniper's rifle, or MC52, was an M1C with the commercial Stith Bear Cub scope manufactured by the Kollmorgen Optical Company under the military designation: telescopic sight - Model 4XD-USMC. The Kollmorgen scope with a slightly
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Production difficulties delayed deliveries to the Army until September 1937. Machine production began at Springfield Armory that month at a rate of ten rifles per day, and reached an output of 100 per day within two years. Despite going into production status, design issues were not at an end. The
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M1s are very rare today and are prized collector's items. In both systems, expanding gases from a fired cartridge are diverted into the gas cylinder. Here, the gases meet a long-stroke piston attached to the operating rod, which is pushed rearward by the force of this high-pressure gas. Then, the
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The PWB rifle, serial No. 2437139, and Springfield Armory's T26 were sent to Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG) on July 26, 1945, for testing. The APG report related that a standard M1 rifle, serial No. 1,032,921, was the "control" rifle to which the shorter rifle was compared during the testing. The
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The task was assigned to Springfield Armory, and John Garand began work in January 1944. The resultant experimental arm, designated as the "U.S. Carbine, Cal. 30, M1E5", was fitted with a specially made 18-inch barrel (not a shortened standard M1 rifle barrel) marked "1 SA 2-44" and a pantograph
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name was invented after the war as a marketing gimmick for commercial Garands built on welded demilled receivers. There are three 18-inch M1 Garand variants, the M1E5 and T26, which never saw service, and the Pacific Warfare Board rifle, which saw very limited service in the Pacific. The M1E5 is
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In battle, the manual of arms called for the rifle to be fired until empty, and then recharged quickly. Due to the well-developed logistical system of the U.S. military at the time, this consumption of ammunition was generally not critical, though this could change in the case of units that came
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A weapon with those features was potentially valuable for paratroopers, as it was more powerful than the carbines and submachine guns currently in use. Preliminary testing revealed it had excessive recoil and muzzle blast, but it was recommended that it be developed further. The Infantry Board
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A detachable M2 conical flash hider, adopted January 25, 1945 slipped over the muzzle and was secured in place by the bayonet lug. A T37 flash hider was developed later. Flash hiders were of limited utility during low-light conditions around dawn and dusk, but were often removed as potentially
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combat team. While the members of the test committee liked the concept of the short M1 rifle, it was determined that the muzzle blast was excessive and was compared to a flash bulb going off in the darkened jungle. The conclusion of the test report stated that the shortened rifle was "totally
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in the Philippines to fabricate 150 rifles in this configuration for testing. Since the previous M1E5 project was not widely disseminated, it is entirely possible that the PWB may not have been aware of Springfield Armory's development of a similar rifle, and conceived the idea independently.
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personally disapproved any caliber change, in part because there were extensive existing stocks of .30 M1 ball ammunition. On February 25, 1932, Adjutant General John B. Shuman, speaking for the Secretary of War, ordered work on the rifles and ammunition in .276 caliber cease immediately and
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clip system that allowed ammunition to be inserted from above, clip included, into the fixed magazine. While this design provided the requisite flush-mount magazine, the clip system increased the rifle's weight and complexity, and made only single loading ammunition possible without a clip.
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In August 2013, the Obama administration banned future private importation of all U.S. made weapons, including the M1 Garand. This action did not preclude the return of surplus U.S. weapons, including M1 Garands, previously loaned by the U.S. to friendly nations, to the custody of the U.S.
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increments. The aperture sight is also able to correct for wind drift operated by turning a windage knob that moves the sight in approximately one MOA increments. The windage lines on the receiver to indicate the windage setting are four MOA apart. The front sighting element consists of a
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Springfield Armory made 637,420 more M1 rifles from 1952 to 1957 and contracts were met with two private firms. Harrington & Richardson made 428,600 from 1953 to 1956 and International Harvester made 337,623 from 1953 to 1957. In total 5,468,772 M1 rifles were made from 1937 to 1957.
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While the M1E5 was more compact than the standard Garand rifle, the short barrel made it an unpleasant gun to fire—and the advantages were not judged to be sufficient to offset the disadvantages. Further development of the M1E5 was suspended as other projects at Springfield, such as the
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Other than the folding stock, the basic M1 rifle was essentially unchanged with the exception of the short barrel, a correspondingly shortened operating rod (and spring) and the lack of a front handguard. The overall length was 37½ inches and it weighed approximately 8 lbs., 6 ozs.
1507:" was tested at Aberdeen Proving Ground in May 1944. It was determined that while accuracy at 300 yards was on par with the standard M1 rifle, recoil, muzzle blast and flash were excessive. It was recommended that a pistol grip be installed, which was done for subsequent testing. 1062: 1190:
Officials in Army Ordnance circles demanded a fixed, non-protruding magazine for the new service rifle. At the time, it was believed that a detachable magazine on a general-issue service rifle would be easily lost by U.S. soldiers (a criticism made of British soldiers and the
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South Korea was the only nation that profited by reselling the M1 rifles, which were provided through Military Assistance Program (MAP), to private companies as "antique collectibles". These sales were authorized by the U.S. government, but were technically illegal under the
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is fired, the rifle ejects the clip and locks the bolt open. The M1 is then ready to reload. Once the clip is inserted, the bolt snaps forward on its own as soon as thumb pressure is released from the top round of the clip, chambering a round and leaving it ready to fire.
1244:. The bolt is locked into the receiver via two locking lugs, which rotate, unlock, and initiate the ejection of the spent cartridge and the reloading cycle when the rifle is discharged. The operating rod (and subsequently the bolt) then returns to its original position. 5287:
Direct Support and General Support Maintenance Manual, Including Repair Parts and Special Tools Lists, (Including Depot Maintenance, Repair Parts and Special Tools), Rifle, 7.62-MM, M14, W/E(1005- 589-1271), Rifle, 7.62-MM, M14A1, W/E(1005-072- 5011), Bipod, Rifle,
1580:. The rifle was machined and tapped on the left side of the receiver for a scope mount, and included the same hardware for mounting a grenade launcher as the M1. The bolt had a hold-open device on the rear receiver bridge, as well as a fire selector similar to the 2465:
In 2009, an effort by the South Korean government to export about 850,000 firearms to the United States, including 87,000 M1 rifles, for eventual sale to civilians, was initially approved by the Obama administration, but it later blocked the sale in March 2010. A
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M16A1s, and were removed from active service in 1978. Many rifles were sold back to the United States for civilian use: 100,000 rifles in 1986 to 1989 via Blue Sky, and 85,000 rifles in 1991 to 1993 via Century Arms. Currently used for ceremonial duty.
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at a similar point in its development. Production of the Garand increased in 1940 despite these difficulties, reaching 600 a day by January 10, 1941, and the Army was fully equipped by the end of 1941. Following the outbreak of World War II in Europe,
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ordered a .30-06 Garand variant. In March 1927, the cavalry board reported trials among the Thompson, Garand, and '03 Springfield had not led to a clear winner. This led to a gas-operated .276 (7 mm) model (patented by Garand on April 12, 1930).
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The M1907 two-piece leather rifle sling was the most common type of sling used with the weapon through World War II. In 1942, a cheaper and more adjustable olive drab canvas sling was introduced and gradually replaced the M1907 after the war.
3390:: (Largely captured and/or inherited from now-defunct Army of the Republic of Vietnam) Some used by the Viet Cong and the Viet Minh, taken from American, French and South Vietnamese forces/armories with a few modified to make them compact. 1230:
Garand's original design for the M1 used a complicated gas system involving a special muzzle extension gas trap, later dropped in mid-1940 in favor of a simpler drilled gas port. Because most of the older rifles were retrofitted, pre-1940
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Even while the shortened M1 rifles were being evaluated by the 503rd PIR, two of them were sent to the Ordnance Dept. in Washington, D.C., by special courier for evaluation. One of these rifles was then forwarded to Springfield Armory.
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M1 Garand variant; 18-inch (457 mm) barrel and standard stock and shortened foregrip secured with M1903 barrel band. 150 made in the Pacific theater of operations upon request by the Pacific War Board for airborne and jungle use.
5228: 1251:, the gas tubes were given a stove-blackening that frequently wore off in use. Unless the gas tube could be quickly repainted, the resultant gleaming muzzle could make the M1 Garand and its user more visible to the enemy in combat. 995:, South Vietnam, the Philippines, etc. Most Garands shipped to allied nations were predominantly manufactured by International Harvester Corporation during the period of 1953–56, and second from Springfield Armory from all periods. 2969:: Received 69,810 M1 rifles (designated "Gevær m/50") from the U.S. government prior to 1964. Some were converted to the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge. Also purchased 20,000 M1s from Italy. The rifle has now been phased out of service. 1187:
under intense fire or were flanked or surrounded by enemy forces. When using the rifle to launch grenades, it requires the removal of a partially loaded clip of ball ammunition and replacement with a clip of M3 blank cartridges.
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meeting recommended adoption of the .276 caliber and production of approximately 125 T3E2s. Meanwhile, Garand redesigned his bolt and his improved T1E2 rifle was retested. The day after the successful conclusion of this test,
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caliber M1 fitted with a removable 20-round magazine, folding bipod and a combined flash suppressor-rifle grenade launcher. The BM59 is capable of selective fire. These rifles were produced under license in Indonesia as the
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and the rifle also used Japanese style tangent sights. The Type 4 had been developed alongside several other experimental semi-automatic rifles. However, none of the rifles entered into service before the end of
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Nonetheless, by late 1944, the Pacific Warfare Board (PWB) decided to move forward with the development of a shortened M1 rifle. Colonel William Alexander, chief of the PWB, directed an Army ordnance unit of the
2395:– began production of the M1 Rifle using a cast, heat-treated receiver with serial numbers in the 7,000,000+ range, along with commercially produced barrels (marked Geneseo, IL) and G.I. military surplus parts. 2482:
personal M1 Garand was auctioned by Rock Island Auction Company and sold for $ 149,500. This rifle was acquired by Kennedy in 1959 from the Director of Civilian Marksmanship and has the serial number 6086970.
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The M1s shortened in the Philippines under the auspices of the PWB had been well-used prior to modification, and the conversion exhibited rather crude craftsmanship, including hand-cut splines on the barrel.
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selective-fire T20 series, were deemed to have a higher priority. Only one example of the M1E5 was fabricated for testing, and the gun resides today in the Springfield Armory National Historic Site Museum.
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dozens of years previously), would render the weapon too susceptible to clogging from dirt and debris and that a protruding magazine would complicate existing manual-of-arms drills. As a result, inventor
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in which International Harvester alone produced a total of 337,623 M1 Garands. A final, very small lot of M1s was produced by Springfield Armory in early 1957, using finished components already on hand.
1515:("brush-cutting") capability. The Ordnance Department was not responsive to these complaints coming in from the Pacific and maintained that the M1 rifle and M1 carbine each filled a specific niche. 2283:, by having the tooling used by Winchester during World War II shipped to them by the U.S. government. These rifles were designated "Model 1952" in Italy. Using this tooling, Beretta developed the 1598:
inches, a barrel length of 24 inches, and weighed 9.61 lb without accessories and 12.5 lb with bipod and empty magazine. It was designated as limited procurement in May 1945. Due to the
1092:, easily operated by the trigger finger. It is engaged when it is pressed rearward into the trigger guard, and disengaged when it is pushed forward and is protruding outside of the trigger guard. 924:
The M1 Garand was made in large numbers during World War II; approximately 5.4 million were made. They were used by every branch of the United States military. The rifle generally performed well.
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Due to widespread United States military assistance as well as their durability, M1 Garands have also been found in use in recent conflicts such as with the insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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barrel, gas cylinder, and front sight assembly were redesigned and entered production in early 1940. Existing "gas-trap" rifles were recalled and retrofitted, mirroring problems with the earlier
2717:: The first rifles were provided to the Korean police prior to 1947, then to the Korean Constabulary in February 1948. Between August 1948 and June 1949, 41,897 rifles were transferred to the 4680:
Karwan, Charles (October 2002). "History in your hands: Springfield Armory's new M1 Garand: the most significant rifle of the 20th Century is once again available to the American shooter".
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that could easily be attached to the end of the barrel. It could be sighted using the M15 sight, which was attached with screws to the left side of the stock, just forward of the trigger.
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U.S. Department of the Interior. (n.d.). Springfield Armory: The best battle implement ever devised (U.S. National Park Service). National Park Service. Retrieved February 18, 2023, from
2772:: Standard issue rifle for U.S. Army and Marine Corps Infantry from 1936 to 1957. Used in the 1970s in reserve and rear-echelon capacities. Still in use for official military ceremonies, 1576:
Another variant that never saw duty was the T20E2. It was an experimental, gas-operated, selective fire rifle with a slightly longer receiver than the M1 and modified to accept 20-round
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procurement on November 7, 1935, then standardized January 9, 1936. The first production model was successfully proof-fired, function-fired, and fired for accuracy on July 21, 1937.
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Enquête nationale sur les armes légères et de petit calibre en Côte d'Ivoire: les défis du contrôle des armes et de la lutte contre la violence armée avant la crise post-électorale
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mount was designated MC-1. The MC52 was also too late to see extensive combat in Korea, but it remained in Marine Corps inventories until replaced by bolt-action rifles during the
1006:'s official adoption in 1958, it was not until 1965 that the changeover from the M1 Garand was fully completed in the active-duty component of the Army (with the exception of the 1982:
M1 Garand variant; 18-inch (457 mm) barrel and standard stock, 1 prototype made by Springfield Armory used for testing, proposed use was for airborne and jungle operations.
2856:: 25.000 M1 Garand rifles were supplied to Austria by the U.S. government after the end of World War 2. Used extensively by the Austrian Armed Forces until the adoption of the 1548:
was not fitted with a front handguard. It had been determined that the full-length stock was superior to the M1E5's folding stock, so the T26 used a standard M1 rifle stock.
1340: 840:, Thompson, and an incomplete one by White, led to a recommendation that work on the (dropped) .30 gas-operated Garand be resumed, and a T1E1 was ordered November 14, 1929. 1095:
The M1 Garand was designed for simple assembly and disassembly to facilitate field maintenance. It can be field stripped (broken down) without tools in just a few seconds.
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metal stock that folded underneath the rifle. The receiver was marked "U.S. Carbine/Cal. .30 M1E5/Springfield/Armory/1". It was designated as a carbine and not a rifle.
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but retains the standard buttstock. The PWB rifle uses an 18-inch (457 mm) barrel, retains the standard buttstock, and has a foregrip secured by M1903 barrel band.
1415:, formerly M1E8) were produced, although not in significant quantities during World War II. The only difference between the two versions is the mounting system for the 1247:
The M1 Garand was one of the first self-loading rifles to use stainless steel for its gas tube, in an effort to prevent corrosion. As the stainless metal could not be
5788: 6638: 6140: 6231: 5766: 5480: 3471: 5942: 6811: 6283: 5367: 3719: 2259:, with only 250 being made and many others were never assembled. There were several problems with jamming and feed systems, which also delayed its testing. 7496: 3728: 7562: 7537: 6114: 928:
called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised." The typical opponent of a US soldier during World War II was usually armed with a slower-firing
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M1E6 Garand variant; M1C sniper variant with 2.2× magnification M73 scope (later modified as the M81, though the M82 or M84 scope could be used) in a
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types. This led to a further trial of an improved "M1924" Garand against the Thompson, ultimately producing an inconclusive report. As a result, the
6173: 7567: 7415: 5537: 5389:"GI's Best Friend Now In Limited Production As Collectors Item From Springfield Armory" (Press release). Springfield Armory Inc. November 30, 2001. 7522: 3088:: Received between 55,000 and 78,000 MS1s and a minor number of M1Cs from the U.S. government prior to 1971; some rifles also supplied from Italy. 7527: 5606: 5438: 5344: 4878: 2781: 6703: 5210: 6588: 7552: 7051: 4430:"Department of the Army Appropriations for 1954: Hearings, 83rd Congress, 1st Session". Washington, D.C.: United States Congress. 1953: 1667. 1752:
mount affixed to the left side of the receiver requiring a leather cheek pad to properly position the shooter's face behind the offset scope
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decided more were needed. Springfield Armory ramped up production, but two new contracts were awarded. During 1953–56, M1s were produced by
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select-fire field conversion for M1 Garand; ability to convert issue M1 Garands to select-fire rifles; fire control setup used in T22E3
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simpler, single-ring Springfield Armory mount attached to the barrel rather than the receiver. The M1C was first widely used during the
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M1 rifles were provided as foreign aid to American allies, including South Korea, West Germany, Italy, Japan, Denmark, Greece, Turkey,
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in 1959. Also received 232,000 M1s from the U.S. government between 1950 and 1970. The M1 Garand was known in the Italian Army as the
4117:. Washington, D.C.: Armed Forces Information and Education Division, Office of the Secretary of Defense. January 18, 1952. p. 10 2526: 2450:. From 1903 to 1996, the CMP was sponsored by the Office of the Director of Civilian Marksmanship (DCM), a position first within the 1301:
A cleaning tool, oiler and grease containers could be stored in two cylindrical compartments in the buttstock for use in the field.
3651: 3604: 845: 5876:. Republic of China Armed Forces Reserve Command,All-Out Defense Mobilization Agency,Ministry of National Defense. June 17, 2024. 5581: 4621: 3833: 1532: 4164: 4032: 2649:: Received 186,090 M1 and 1880 M1C/M1D rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. Still in use for ceremonial duties by the 1103:
can be fine adjusted by setting the rear sight elevation pinion. The elevation pinion can be fine adjusted in approximately one
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The M14 is basically an improved M1 with a modified gas system and detachable magazine, 20 rounds being the standard capacity.
3320:: Received about 40,000 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1965. (designated "ปลยบ.88" (Type 88 Self-Loading rifle)) 1967:
T25 variant had a pistol grip: the stock angled upwards to reduce muzzle climb; and chambered for the new T65 .30 Light Rifle
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variants, which were introduced in World War II and saw action in Korea and Vietnam). The Garand remained in service with the
6844: 6764: 6736: 6648:, Commission Nationale de Lutte contre la Prolifération et la Circulation Illicite des Armes Légères et de Petit Calibre and 6572: 6377: 6352: 6318: 5955: 5843: 5664: 5269: 5182: 5007: 4960: 4847: 4815: 4664: 4414: 4389: 4364: 4277: 4216: 4174: 3989: 3934: 3872: 3816: 3784: 3751: 3702: 3677: 3487: 2654: 2604: 1041: 1029: 6896: 7408: 6645: 5792: 5519: 4591: 1767:
mount attached to the rear of the barrel allowing quick removal of the scope but similarly requiring the leather cheek pad
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completely, and all resources be directed toward identification and correction of deficiencies in the Garand .30 caliber.
5681: 2773: 2607:, Still used by honor guards. In 2017, it was reported that the Philippine government may send 86,000 rifles to the U.S. 956: 649: 6223: 1271:
U.S. Marine preparing to fire M31 HEAT antitank rifle grenade from M1 rifle in the indirect mode with butt on the ground
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in 1996 to instruct citizens in marksmanship and promote practice and safety in the use of firearms. The group holds a
889: 829:, and on September 21, the board reported no clear winner. The .30 Garand, however, was dropped in favor of the .276. 7089: 7044: 6795: 6446: 5741: 5114: 4901: 4787: 4071: 3635: 3446: 1366: 870: 317: 5961: 4534: 864:
that also had to be recalled and reworked approximately three years into production and foreshadowing rework of the
684:, saying "popular usage has placed the accent on the second syllable, so that the rifle has become the 'guh-RAND.'" 5873: 5197:
Historicalfirearms. (2016, February 5). The T35 side-loading Garand in 1951/52 Springfield... Historical Firearms.
5047: 3913: 817:
ammunition, shared by the Thompson). On August 13, 1928, a semiautomatic rifle board (SRB) carried out joint Army,
7000:– United States Association, with members worldwide, dedicated to the research and documentation of the M1 Garand. 6819: 6291: 5375: 4568: 4137: 2478:
Military surplus Garands and post-war copies made for the civilian market are popular among enthusiasts. In 2015,
955:
Many M1s were repaired or rebuilt after World War II. While U.S. forces were still engaged in the Korean War, the
7532: 7401: 5555: 5415: 5128: 2451: 1407:
variants, never saw active duty. The sniper versions were modified to accept scope mounts, and two versions (the
1348: 6062: 5711: 1439:. Korean War production was 4,796 M1Cs and 21,380 M1Ds; although few M1Ds were completed in time to see combat. 7289: 6035: 5888: 3435: 3422: 2718: 2696: 1883: 1857: 1577: 1037: 123: 6118: 7547: 2608: 2434:(CMP). The CMP is run by the Corporation for the Promotion of Rifle Practice and Firearms Safety (CPRPFS), a 2431: 2427: 1287:
with a 10-inch (254 mm) blade (either made standard or shortened from existing M1905 bayonets); and the
984: 6613: 1104: 7037: 6148: 5459: 5411: 1428: 825:
trials among the .30 Thompson, both cavalry and infantry versions of the T1 Pedersen, "M1924" Garand, and
7471: 7461: 6181: 2650: 2507: 1045: 163: 2874:: Received large numbers of M1s from the U.S. government in the early 1950s. Some were converted to the 2304: 7294: 7284: 7104: 7060: 5399: 5199:
https://www.historicalfirearms.info/post/138754496306/the-t35-side-loading-garand-in-195152-springfield
5028: 2435: 1443: 1011: 944:
for Japan). The effect of faster-firing infantry small arms in general soon stimulated both Allied and
873:
was awarded an "educational" production contract for 65,000 rifles, with deliveries beginning in 1943.
822: 263: 5352: 2499: 7299: 6928: 6861: 6515: 5303: 5214: 4353: 3800: 2674: 2599:: Received 34,300 M1 and 2,630 M1D rifles from the U.S. government in 1950–1975. Retired from active 2479: 1022:
into the early 1970s. The South Korean Army was using M1 Garands in the Vietnam War as late as 1966.
133: 5950:(in Korean). Republic of Korea: Ministry of Defense Institute for Military History. pp. 26–28. 4448: 3132:: Used by the army from 1945. Beretta license-built 100,000 M1s from 1950 until the adoption of the 2038:
clip, a small number were experimentally fitted with a 10-round internal magazine loaded by 5-round
897: 7456: 7451: 7004: 4498: 2392: 2176: 1520: 343: 248: 7029: 5767:"Breaking: Civilian Marksmanship Program May Receive 86,000 M1 Garand Rifles from the Philippines" 5408: 4311: 2941:
Captured from Nationalist forces during the Chinese Civil War and US/ROK forces in the Korean War.
7174: 5914: 5798: 4917: 4110: 3912:
Fortier, D. M. (Ed.). (2021, April 15). The M1 Garand rifle, what made it great?. Firearms News.
2600: 2459: 1763:
M1E7 Garand variant; M1D sniper variant with M82 scope (though the M84 scope could be used) in a
1726:
M1 Garand variant; 18-inch (457 mm) barrel, pistol grip and folding stock, for Airborne use
1210: 960: 861: 327: 20: 5859: 3925:
Hogg, Ian V.; Weeks, John (1977). "US Rifle, Caliber .30in ('Garand'), M1-M1E9, MiC, M1D, T26".
2838:: Received about 30,000 M1s from the U.S. government before 1964. Some were converted to accept 2091:
T47 variant; same as the T25, except for a conventional stock and chambered for 7.62×51mm NATO.
1335:
may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience
7486: 6623: 4708: 3466: 3071: 2726: 2455: 2439: 462: 6938: 6834: 6435: 6342: 5654: 5259: 5115:"American Rifleman | Official Journal of the NRA | 'Tanker Garands': The Real Story" 3888: 3776: 1945:
T22 variant; stock angled upwards to reduce muzzle climb; heavy barrel; uses T27 fire control
832:
Further tests by the SRB in July 1929, which included rifle designs by Colt–Browning, Garand,
773:
prototype. In 1924, twenty-four rifles, identified as "M1922s", were built at Springfield. At
7265: 7250: 7240: 6971: 6949: 6916: 5504:
ATF Guidebook - Importation & Verification of Firearms, Ammunition, and Implements of War
4997: 4976: 4872: 4435: 3808: 2983:: Received more than 1,365 M1s from the U.S. government until 1965 and 211 M1D sniper rifles. 2443: 2364: 2244: 2115: 1164: 515: 508: 223: 6959: 6203: 3768: 3011:: Received 232,500 M1 rifles from the U.S. government in 1950–1964. The M1 was known as the 2725:. The U.S. provided additional 471,839 rifles during the war, and rifle in service with the 7334: 7114: 2232: 1968: 1602:, the number for manufacture was reduced to 100. The project was terminated in March 1948. 1175: 1078: 547: 434: 178: 138: 57: 3442: 8: 7222: 7156: 6004: 4952: 4839: 2491: 2236: 2180: 2102: 1295: 1241: 1226:
Two of Garand's patents, showing the original gas trap design and revised gas port system
1044:(JROTC) teams of all branches of the U.S. military. It is also used by the drill team of 1015: 213: 198: 168: 148: 143: 45: 6589:"The military rifle cartridges of Honduras from Cortez to zelaya. - Free Online Library" 3950: 3601: 2430:
meeting certain qualifications may purchase U.S. military surplus M1 rifles through the
2240: 2195: 2171:
eject the spent cartridge case and reload a fresh round from the internal clip. Used by
1081:. It is 43.6 inches (1,107 mm) long and it weighs about 9.5 pounds (4.31 kg). 7466: 7377: 7260: 7194: 3955: 3180:: Received an estimated 25,000-30,000 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1974. 3032: 2054: 1764: 1599: 1553: 1531:, New Guinea, by an ad hoc test committee, which included three platoon leaders of the 1456: 1424: 1171: 1136: 1070: 1019: 818: 782: 763: 574: 570: 555: 442: 312: 243: 233: 4629: 3844: 3555:
Additional trials in 1930 found Bostonian Joseph White's rifles insufficiently robust.
742: 7441: 7324: 7184: 7136: 7094: 6901: 6840: 6791: 6787: 6760: 6732: 6728: 6649: 6568: 6442: 6373: 6348: 6314: 6310: 6088: 6009: 5951: 5839: 5784: 5660: 5600: 5462:[Government promotes export of 87,000 M1 rifles...U.S. Government Consents]. 5265: 5178: 5090: 5003: 4956: 4897: 4843: 4811: 4783: 4660: 4656: 4410: 4385: 4360: 4273: 4212: 4170: 4067: 4037: 4006: 3985: 3930: 3868: 3812: 3780: 3769: 3747: 3698: 3673: 3631: 3627: 3498: 3477: 2753: 2700: 2678: 2531: 2391:
In 1982, years after the closure of the U.S. Springfield Armory, a commercial firm –
2356: 1749: 1448: 1085: 964: 949: 848: 770: 686: 593: 582: 457: 322: 238: 228: 188: 118: 4738: 4599: 4576:. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office – via Easy39th.com. 2875: 2324: 2288: 2031: 1838: 1663:
Basic model. Identical to T1E2. Later change to gas port did not change designation
1572:
The T20E2 selective-fire prototype was designed to feed from 20-round BAR magazines.
1460: 722:
as the pronunciation favored by U.S. servicemen, deemed either pronunciation valid.
644:, identical to the pronunciation of John Garand's surname. However, a 1952 issue of 447: 7342: 7109: 7076: 7023: 7010: 6953: 4254:. Harrisburg, PA: Military Service Publishing Co. pp. 44–46, 155–156, 165–166. 3404:: Received 220,300 M1 and 520 M1C/M1D rifles from the U.S. government in 1950–1975. 2994: 2777: 2511: 2467: 2360: 1715:
M1 Garand variant; gas cut-off and expansion system with piston integral to op-rod
1481: 1416: 1397: 1033: 988: 952:
firearms then in production, as well as to develop new types of infantry firearms.
925: 826: 693: 655: 621: 586: 273: 173: 6910: 2744:: Received 312,430 M1 rifles from the U.S. government in 1953–1970, saw action in 7319: 7255: 7017: 6781: 6686: 5464: 5285: 4981: 4682: 3862: 3621: 3608: 3191: 3164: 2749: 2328: 2320: 2172: 1686: 1528: 1275:
Several accessories were used with the Garand rifle. Several different styles of
1192: 992: 980: 790: 767: 759: 486: 218: 3914:
https://www.firearmsnews.com/editorial/m1-garand-rifle-what-made-it-great/391738
1700:
M1 Garand variant; roller added to bolt's cam lug (later adapted for use in the
7166: 7099: 6489: 4059: 3331: 2633: 2317: 2005: 1909: 1568: 1504: 1143: 810: 794: 786: 778: 612: 597: 39: 5920: 5689: 5439:"Obama Administration Reverses Course, Forbids Sale of 850,000 Antique Rifles" 4925: 2571:: Thousands were bought from various sources and received as aid from the U.S. 2518: 585:
for the United States. By most accounts, the M1 rifle performed well. General
7511: 7476: 7436: 7141: 6561:
Hand weapons: a reference work about the prey weapons of the Wehrmacht (1942)
6441:(11 ed.). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: The Stackpole Company. p. 292. 6013: 4516: 3570:
The servicing number does not include the Air Force, the Navy, or the police.
3401: 3375: 3265:: Received possibly 150,000 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. 2839: 2769: 2721:
from the United States. The military was equipped with 40,378 M1s before the
2251: 2039: 1280: 1237: 1089: 933: 902: 893:
George Patton letter to Springfield Armory on the M1 Garand, January 26, 1945
551: 469: 5538:"Lot 1807: Springfield Armory National Match 1959 M1 Garand John F. Kennedy" 2546: 2542:
A Turkish soldier stands guard with his M1 rifle at the Anıtkabir Mausoleum.
1841:
with press-in chamber insert, enlarged gas port, and 7.62mm barrel bushing.
1347:
any relevant information, and removing excessive detail that may be against
611:
Sources differ on the pronunciation of the M1 Garand. Some, such as General
589:
called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised". The M1 replaced the
7491: 7212: 7204: 7084: 7064: 6708: 6704:"Military rifle cartridges of the Netherlands: from Sumatra to Afghanistan" 4235:, Volume 19, p. 2092, "Pedersen", describes the ammunition as "lubricated". 3834:"The Beretta "Type E" Garand, Variations on John Garand's Combat Proven M1" 3303: 3133: 3100: 3053: 3036: 3027: 2411: 2293: 2284: 2256: 2224: 1934:
T22 variant; improved trigger group, gas cylinder, muzzle brake, and bipod
1420: 1112: 1074: 1007: 976: 774: 559: 476: 258: 208: 153: 113: 5502: 4066:(Reprint ed.). Highland Park, New Jersey: Gun Room Press. p. 1. 2538: 2371:
employs an investment cast, heat-treated receiver and a version of the M1/
1259: 916: 7372: 7367: 7304: 7275: 7217: 7189: 6926: 4566: 4542: 4499:"Prints and Posters: The American Soldier, 1966 - by H. Charles McBarron" 3218: 3151: 3118:: Received up to 60,000 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. 2980: 2803: 2714: 2596: 2419: 2339:
is basically an improved select-fire M1 Garand with a 20-round magazine.
1853: 1652:
Trial designation for gas-trap Garand. Basically a T1E1 with a new bolt.
1452: 1248: 1197: 999: 987:
was already preparing production of the Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk 1. However,
945: 929: 837: 590: 578: 466: 291: 203: 183: 158: 7393: 5874:"An Introduction to the National Revolutionary Martyrs' Shrine of R.O.C" 5419: 5211:"Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Region Modified 8mm M1 Garand Rifles – Silah Report" 5055: 4918:"SURROUNDED BY THE ENEMY: WWII Veteran Describes Fighting for Survival!" 2316:, officially the United States Rifle, 7.62 mm, M14, is an American 2235:. It was a copy of the American M1 Garand but with an integral 10-round 1956:
M1 Garand variant; upward angled stock like T22E3HB; standard clip fed.
7151: 7068: 3335: 3234: 3226: 2745: 2722: 2332: 1485: 1436: 1288: 1284: 1267: 1099: 905: 563: 418: 128: 881: 7481: 7446: 7309: 7245: 5719: 4863:
CW5 Charles D. Petrie, U.S. Army (April 2012). "More On The "Ping"".
4298:
The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Weapons and Warfare
3513: 3461: 3361: 3248: 3085: 2835: 2372: 2336: 2313: 1778:
M1 Garand variant; similar to M1E4, with piston separate from op-rod
1701: 1581: 1527:
Some of the shortened M1 rifles were field-tested in October 1944 on
1003: 909: 865: 600: 6915:. Washington, DC: United States War Department. 1940. Archived from 3104:: Received 165,490 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1964. 360:
About $ 85 (during World War II) (equivalent to $ 1,500 in 2023)
7357: 7059: 3408: 3364:: Received 55,670 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. 3317: 3306:: Received 34,530 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. 3292:: Received 30,750 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1975. 3289: 3262: 3067: 3056:: Received 46,750 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1965. 2893: 2585:: Received 72,800 M1 rifles from the U.S. government prior to 1964. 2053:
T20E2 variant; rechambered for 7.62×51mm NATO using T35 barrel and
802: 268: 253: 3721:
Power Pack: U.S. Intervention in the Dominican Republic, 1965-1966
3251:: Received 5000 M1 from the US 1954 MAP bought 1500 M1 from Canada 3194:: Received 36,270 M1 rifles from the U.S. government in 1950—1975. 2997:: Received 20,700 M1 rifles from the U.S. government in the 1960s. 2900:
from the U.S. during their civil war against communist insurgents.
2155:
Demilitarized. Barrel is unplugged but is welded to the receiver.
2133:
Demilitarized and barrel plugged. US Air Force instructional use.
730: 596:
as the U.S. service rifle in 1936, and was itself replaced by the
7382: 7362: 7352: 7314: 7232: 7179: 7128: 6559: 3387: 3348: 3205: 2966: 2853: 2822: 2629: 2550:
A map with users of the M1 Garand in blue and former users in red
2503: 2368: 2276: 1923:
T22 variant; improved magazine release and bolt hold-open device
1790: 1276: 998:
Some Garands were still being used by the United States into the
969: 941: 937: 885:
John Garand (left) points out features of the M1 to army generals
806: 332: 4862: 3889:"U.S. Department of the Army Technical Manual No. 9-1005-222-12" 1222: 1028:
Some military drill teams still use the M1 rifle, including the
7347: 5835: 5789:"Half a Billion and Still Counting: Global Firearms Stockpiles" 5088:
Canfield, Bruce N. (September 2014). "Better Late Than Never".
3482: 3276: 3177: 3115: 3008: 2911: 2879: 2871: 2741: 2692: 2646: 2582: 2215: 1404: 1388:
Rifle, Cal. 30, M1C with M84 telescope and rear sight protector
979:
looked at the M1 as a possible replacement for its bolt-action
3929:(2nd ed.). London: Arms & Armour Press. p. 183. 2250:, the Type 4's integral magazine was charged with two 5-round 1127: 1061: 633: 630: 7124: 6567:(in German). Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek. 2008. 6370:
Die Bewaffnung des österreichischen Bundesheeres: 1918 - 1990
5682:"Scout Sniper Development - "An accurate shot to the future"" 3129: 2938: 2925: 2857: 2670: 2568: 1908:
M1 Garand variant; fully automatic select-fire conversion by
1032:, the United States Air Force Academy Cadet Honor Guard, the 833: 6839:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 147. 6347:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 145. 5659:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 147. 5264:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 146. 4272:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 143. 4211:(3rd ed.). Iola, WI: Krause Publications. p. 142. 2415:
The Civilian Marksmanship Program cartouche on an M1 Garand.
1826:
M1 Garand variant; "White" gas cut-off and expansion system
7019:"Rifle - U.S. Cal. .30 M1 - Principles of Operation (1943)" 6933:. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office. 5556:"Military rifle cartridges of Haiti. - Free Online Library" 5129:"Lever-Action Rifle Resurgence & M1 Garand Rifle Facts" 2952: 2378: 2347: 2280: 2156: 1641:
A single trial rifle that broke its bolt in the 1931 trial
1480:
equipped with a shorter 18-inch (457 mm) barrel and a
699: 661: 6927:
Departments of the Army and the Air Force (October 1951).
6536:(in French). Berger-Levrault. March 19, 1956. p. 226. 5507:. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 2001. 4896:. Lincoln, RI: Andrew Mowbray Publishers. pp. 69–70. 4567:
Departments of the Army and the Air Force (October 1951).
4336:
Canfield, Bruce N. (September 2011). "The First Garands".
2403: 2227:, often referred to as the Type 5 Rifle (Japanese: 四式自動小銃 6995: 5423: 5175:
Random Shots: Episodes In The Life Of A Weapons Developer
4481: 4479: 4477: 2495:
Austrian troops training with M1 Garands during the 1950s
2383: 2287:
series of rifles. The BM59 was essentially a rechambered
1431:, but few saw combat; wartime production was 7,971 M1Cs. 1151: 814: 813:
rifle, calling it "highly promising" (despite its use of
708: 696: 670: 658: 627: 6000:"SOUTH KOREAN WEAPONS SALES TO NORTHERN VA. FIRM PROBED" 5177:. Bennington, VT: Merriam Press. pp. 17–22, 95–95. 4466:
Canfield, Bruce N. (November 2015). "Cold War Warrior".
2699:
during the Cold War.Still used by the Armed Forces as a
2522:
National Defense Academy of Japan Honor Guard Drill Team
1815:
M1 Garand variant; gas port moved back approx. 6 inches
1492:
directed Col. Rene Studler to proceed with the project.
405:
9.5 lb (4.31 kg) to 11.6 lb (5.3 kg)
6872: 6540: 6455: 6419:
Canadian Army EME Manuals; photographic evidence; book
5916:[전쟁기념관×건들건들: 헌신의 도구] 제1편 국군의 손에 쥐어진 첫 무기, M1 소총 5023: 5021: 5019: 5002:(Illustrated ed.). Osprey Publishing. p. 21. 3472:
List of U.S. Army weapons by supply catalog designation
3412:
A U.S. infantryman holding an M1 captured in Iraq, 2007
2267: 6912:
FM 23-5 Basic Field Manual U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1
6862:"Improvised Weapons of the Irish Underground (Ulster)" 6264: 5979: 5291:. Washington, DC: Department of the Army. August 1972. 5147: 4894:
The Complete Guide to the M1 Garand and the M1 Carbine
4474: 4086:, and the stress on the first syllable, to rhyme with 3980:
Pendergast, Sara; Pendergast, Tom (2000). "Firearms".
3975: 3973: 3657:(in French). No. 220. March 1992. pp. 12–16. 2068:
T36 variant; same as T36, except in gas port location
1392: 1384: 762:-born Garand went to work at the United States Army's 3602:
https://www.nps.gov/articles/springfieldarmoryww2.htm
2780:. Additionally, it remains the standard rifle of the 2194:
M1 Garands in Pakistan were found to be chambered in
2144:
Demilitarized and barrel plugged. Instructional use.
901:
U.S. Army infantryman in 1942 with M1 in front of an
711: 673: 6939:"List of M1 Garand Serial Numbers By Month and Year" 6204:"Turkish Military High School ceremonial procession" 5812: 5016: 3979: 3729:
United States Army Command and General Staff College
714: 705: 676: 667: 636: 5481:"Obama Offers New Executive Actions On Gun Control" 5295: 3970: 702: 664: 624: 7022:is available for free viewing and download at the 7009:is available for free viewing and download at the 6434: 5783: 5400: 4384:(7th ed.). Krause Publications. p. 286. 4380:Hogg, Ian V.; Weeks, John S. (February 10, 2000). 4352: 3746:. Men-at-Arms 128. Osprey Publishing. p. 34. 1804:M1 Garand variant; short-stroke Tappet gas system 1419:. In June 1944, the M1C was adopted as a standard 920:U.S. Marine Corps Silent Drill Team with M1 rifles 6978:. Bonnier Corporation. December 1940. p. 68. 6755:Gander, Terry J.; Hogg, Ian V., eds. (May 1995). 6386: 6367: 6226:[Ceremony at the Turkish Naval Academy]. 5998:York, Michael; Digilio, Alice (January 8, 1988). 5582:"Uphold Democracy 1994: WWII weapons encountered" 5520:"The Financial Assessment of Military Small Arms" 2205: 2080:the M1 replaced by the T47's gas cut-off system. 7509: 6678: 6606: 3697:. Elite 166. Osprey Publishing. pp. 60–61. 3672:(2nd ed.). Kent: Grange Books. p. 49. 1674:M1 Garand variant; modified cam angle in op-rod 1396:Rifle, Cal. 30, M1D with M84 telescope and T-37 983:, but decided against it as by January 1940 the 972:also produced Garands using Winchester tooling. 777:during 1925, they were tested against models by 6750: 6748: 5944:Korean War : Weapons of the United Nations 4698:"Springfield Armory M1 Garand Operating Manual" 4562: 4560: 4461: 4459: 4166:A G.I. in The Ardennes: The Battle of the Bulge 3775:. Men-at-Arms 128. Osprey Publishing. pp.  2782:United States Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon 6630: 6336: 6334: 6332: 6330: 5712:"The incumbent Director of Government Arsenal" 5648: 5646: 5644: 5642: 5640: 5638: 5636: 5526:. pp. 53–59 – via robertankony.net. 4985:. Bonnier Corporation. March 1944. p. 74. 4300:. Vol. 10. London: Phoebus. p. 1088. 3015:(Semi-automatic rifle 7.62mm (calibre .30) M1) 2752:. Still used by the Turkish Armed Forces as a 1459:has also used the Garand, rechambered for the 83:1936–1957 (as the standard U.S. service rifle) 7409: 7045: 7006:"Rifle Marksmanship with the M1 Rifle (1942)" 6644:(Report). Special Report No. 14 (in French). 6276: 6176:[July 1974: Cyprus Peace Operation]. 5794:Small Arms Survey 2011: Profiling the Problem 5634: 5632: 5630: 5628: 5626: 5624: 5622: 5620: 5618: 5616: 5229:""Japanese Garand" WWII Semi-Automatic Rifle" 4733: 4731: 4729: 4653:U.S. Marine Rifleman 1939–45: Pacific Theater 4592:"M1 Garand Operations: Loading and Unloading" 2794: 2407:A civilian, target shooting with an M1 Garand 2198:due to a lack of .30-06 ammo in the country. 1852:M1 Garand variant; select-fire conversion by 1484:. The T26 also uses an 18-inch (457 mm) 948:to greatly increase their issue of semi- and 19:"Garand" redirects here. For other uses, see 6984:"Collection Record: U.S. Rifle M1 .30 SN# 1" 6804: 6745: 6636: 6472: 6470: 5734: 5345:"Focus on Basics, Urges Small Arms Designer" 4557: 4456: 4263: 4261: 4202: 4200: 4198: 4196: 4194: 4192: 4190: 4188: 4186: 1871:T20 variant; uses its own type of magazines 6759:(21st ed.). Jane's Information Group. 6685:Doe, Samuel Kanyon; Enahoro, Peter (1985). 6516:"Infantry Weapons of the Salvadoran Forces" 6327: 6133: 5997: 5605:: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list ( 4949:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II 4877:: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list ( 4836:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II 4528: 4526: 4407:The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II 4296:Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (1977). "Garand". 4144:. The National Rifle Association of America 4033:"The M14 Rifle: John Garand's Final Legacy" 3744:Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars 1948–73 3013:Fusil semi-automatique 7 mm 62 (C. 30) M. 1 2458:. The DCM was normally an active-duty Army 2279:produced Garands in Italy at the behest of 1897:T20E2 variant; HBAR (heavy barrel) variant 44:M1 Garand rifle from the collection of the 7563:World War II firearms of the United States 7538:Semi-automatic rifles of the United States 7416: 7402: 7052: 7038: 6826: 6754: 6684: 5613: 4999:The U.S. Army in World War II: The Pacific 4763:"FM 23-100", Department of the Army (1943) 4726: 4585: 4583: 4295: 4291: 4289: 4245: 4243: 4241: 3693:de Quesada, Alejandro (January 10, 2009). 3692: 2423:A woman, target shooting with an M1 Garand 1283:, with a 16-inch (406 mm) blade; the 1065:The M1 Garand with important parts labeled 7558:Weapons and ammunition introduced in 1936 7423: 6996:"The Garand Collectors Association (GCA)" 6972:"He Invented the World's Deadliest Rifle" 6950:"How to Shoot the U.S. Army Rifle (1943)" 6930:Field Manual, U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1 6467: 6395:"How Many Weapons Are There in Cambodia?" 5777: 5688:. Philippine Marine Corps. Archived from 5454: 5452: 5048:"Sniper Central: U.S. Army M1C & M1D" 4829: 4827: 4801: 4799: 4773: 4771: 4769: 4379: 4258: 4183: 4162: 4138:"Garand Name Pronunciation: Who's Right?" 3982:St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture 3924: 3843:. Vol. 7, no. 9. Archived from 3018: 2097: 1367:Learn how and when to remove this message 7518:.30-06 Springfield semi-automatic rifles 6897:"7.62x51mm NATO U.S. Navy Garand Rifles" 6894: 6878: 6780:Rottman, Gordon L. (February 10, 2009). 6701: 6546: 6461: 6368:Urrisk-Obertyński, Rolf M., ed. (1990). 6270: 5985: 5478: 5153: 5087: 4977:"Fitting the Army's Modern Garand Rifle" 4891: 4523: 4485: 4465: 4335: 4135: 4030: 3951:"The Best Battle Implement Ever Devised" 3860: 3661: 3619: 3407: 2545: 2537: 2525: 2517: 2498: 2490: 2418: 2410: 2402: 2382: 2379:Springfield Armory commercial production 2346: 2303: 2266: 2214: 1578:Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) magazines 1567: 1391: 1383: 1266: 1258: 1221: 1150: 1142: 1126: 1060: 915: 896: 888: 880: 741: 729: 7568:World War II infantry weapons of France 6779: 6304: 5579: 5433: 5431: 5359: 5109: 5107: 5105: 4650: 4589: 4580: 4382:Military Small Arms of the 20th Century 4286: 4249: 4238: 4225: 4058: 3927:Military Small-Arms of the 20th Century 3771:Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars (2) 2615: 2189: 2034:; While the majority used the standard 1882:T20 variant; E2 magazines will work in 1533:503rd Parachute Infantry Regiment (PIR) 7528:Cold War firearms of the United States 7510: 7090:Colt Model 1903/1908 Pocket Hammerless 6832: 6722: 6615:Armi e mezzi in dotazione all'esercito 6513: 6479:"Beretta's BM 59, The Ultimate Garand" 6340: 6254:"Turkish Air Force guard at Anitkabir" 5679: 5652: 5517: 5449: 5343:Ezell, Virginia Hart (November 2001). 5329:. Jane's Information Group: 43. 2003. 5257: 5251: 5168: 5166: 5164: 5162: 5083: 5081: 5079: 5077: 5075: 5073: 4946: 4833: 4824: 4805: 4796: 4777: 4766: 4679: 4673: 4404: 4355:Historical Dictionary of the U.S. Army 4267: 4206: 4163:Hambucken, Denis (February 28, 2020). 3799: 3741: 3644: 3091: 1403:Most variants of the Garand, save the 1291:with a 6.75-inch (171 mm) blade. 7397: 7105:Smith & Wesson "Victory" revolver 7033: 6895:Canfield, Bruce (December 23, 2013). 6783:North Vietnamese Army Soldier 1958–75 6773: 6637:de Tessières, Savannah (April 2012). 6432: 6392: 6372:(1. Aufl ed.). Graz: Weishaupt. 6234:from the original on October 11, 2020 5818: 5342: 5301: 5172: 4995: 4350: 4344: 3760: 3717: 3667: 3620:Thompson, Leroy (February 20, 2013). 3488:Table of handgun and rifle cartridges 2605:Citizen Armed Force Geographical Unit 2534:honor guard soldier and his M1 Garand 2179:honor guards for parading and firing 2138:Rifle, Training Aid, Caliber .30, M1 1042:Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps 7553:United States Marine Corps equipment 7523:7.62×51mm NATO semi-automatic rifles 6859: 6476: 6174:"Temmuz 1974: Kıbrıs Barış Harekatı" 5428: 5102: 4532: 4312:"Military Firearms: M1 Garand Rifle" 4136:Keefe IV, Mark A. (March 12, 2012). 3831: 3766: 3735: 2632:: Used as a ceremonial rifle by the 2554: 2243:cartridge. Where the Garand used an 2149:Rifle, Dummy Drill, Caliber .30, M1 1789:M1 Garand variant; variant with the 1319: 1163:The M1 rifle is fed by a reversible 6620:Arms and means supplied to the army 6089:"[권홍우의 오늘의 경제소사]M-1 개런드 소총" 5940: 5862:. SPRINGFIELD ARMORY. May 18, 2021. 5365: 5323:Jane's International Defense Review 5159: 5070: 3793: 3416: 2788: 2164:Rifle, Ceremonial, Caliber .30, M1 2030:M1 Garand variant; rechambered for 1600:cessation of hostilities with Japan 1030:U.S. Marine Corps Silent Drill Team 766:and began working on a .30 caliber 13: 7573:World War II semi-automatic rifles 7543:Sniper rifles of the United States 6818:. October 27, 2016. Archived from 6669: 6290:. October 27, 2016. Archived from 6209:Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality 6036:"국군과 31년 '동고동락' M1, 1978년 '현역 은퇴'" 5860:"THE M1 GARAND & THE COLD WAR" 5680:Martir, Jonathan (November 2001). 5479:Lederman, Josh (August 29, 2013). 5405:Tooltip Public Law (United States) 5213:. February 7, 2020. Archived from 4535:"Modern Firearms: Rifle M1 Garand" 4409:. New York: Orbis Publishing Ltd. 4031:Canfield, Bruce (April 28, 2016). 4004: 2448:Title 36 of the United States Code 2210: 1837:M1 Garand variant; rechambered in 1737:M1 Garand variant; sniper variant 1605: 750:clip at U.S. Army Museum of Hawaii 581:. It was the first standard-issue 14: 7584: 6888: 6757:Jane's Infantry Weapons 1995/1996 6723:Jurado, Carlos Caballero (1990). 6147:. August 23, 1974. Archived from 5460:"정부, M1소총 8만7000여정 수출 추진…美 정부 동의" 5045: 5029:"M1 Accessories - Winter Trigger" 3727:. Leavenworth Papers, Number 15. 3447:Provisional Irish Republican Army 3070:: Received from the US after the 2878:cartridge and modified to accept 2262: 1536:unsuitable for a combat weapon". 1108:wing-guard-protected front post. 1051: 573:cartridge and is named after its 6853: 6716: 6695: 6674:. Osprey Publishing. p. 18. 6663: 6581: 6552: 6526: 6507: 6426: 6413: 6361: 6298: 6246: 6216: 6196: 6166: 6107: 6081: 6060: 6054: 6033: 6027: 5886: 5518:Ankony, Robert C. (April 2000). 4924:. March 27, 2021. Archived from 4359:. Greenwood Press. p. 286. 4090:(except that the final sound is 4007:"History of the M1 Garand Rifle" 3984:. St. James Press. p. 102. 3718:Yates, Lawrence A. (July 1988). 3573: 3441: 3428: 3394: 3380: 3368: 3354: 3341: 3324: 3310: 3296: 3282: 3269: 3255: 3241: 3211: 3198: 3184: 3170: 3157: 3144: 3122: 3108: 3093: 3078: 3060: 3046: 3041:7.62 mm Selbstladegewehr 251 (a) 3020: 3001: 2987: 2973: 2959: 2945: 2931: 2918: 2904: 2886: 2864: 2846: 2828: 2815: 2796: 2762: 2734: 2707: 2685: 2663: 2639: 2622: 2589: 2575: 2561: 2342: 1470: 1379: 1324: 1263:U.S. M5 bayonet with M8 scabbard 942:Type 38 or Type 99 Arisaka rifle 692: 654: 648:, a periodical published by the 620: 606: 496:Effective firing range 194:1964 Ethiopian–Somali Border War 38: 5991: 5934: 5907: 5880: 5866: 5852: 5824: 5759: 5704: 5673: 5573: 5548: 5530: 5511: 5495: 5472: 5393: 5382: 5336: 5314: 5278: 5221: 5203: 5191: 5121: 5039: 4989: 4969: 4940: 4910: 4885: 4856: 4757: 4690: 4644: 4622:"Field Stripping the M1 Garand" 4614: 4509: 4491: 4423: 4398: 4373: 4329: 4304: 4156: 4129: 4111:"The Development of the Garand" 4103: 4052: 4024: 3998: 3943: 3918: 3906: 3881: 3854: 3825: 3652:"L'armement français en A.F.N." 3564: 3549: 3529: 2398: 2239:and chambered for the Japanese 2231:), was a Japanese experimental 1119: 1088:is located at the front of the 569:The rifle is chambered for the 86:1940s–present (other countries) 7175:M1928/M1928A1/M1/M1A1 Thompson 6393:Wille, Christina (June 2006). 6095:(in Korean). February 16, 2016 5468:(in Korean). January 19, 2012. 3867:. Oxford: Osprey. p. 33. 3805:Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin 3742:Laffin, John (June 15, 1982). 3711: 3686: 3670:20th Century Military Uniforms 3613: 3594: 3436:Moro National Liberation Front 2697:Republic of China Armed Forces 2677:. Still used by the JSDF as a 2603:service. Used by units of the 2206:Copies and postwar derivatives 1254: 1038:Reserve Officer Training Corps 876: 754: 690:magazine, while acknowledging 491:2,800 ft/s (853 m/s) 373: 124:Indonesian National Revolution 1: 6725:Central American Wars 1959–89 6702:Scarlata, Paul (April 2014). 6688:Doe, the Man Behind the Image 6672:Japanese Army of World War II 6514:Montes, Julio A. (May 2000). 5033:Civilian Marksmanship Program 4626:Civilian Marksmanship Program 4517:"Hans Majestet Kongens Garde" 4011:Garand Collectors Association 3902:– via Biggerhammer.net. 3587: 2609:Civilian Marksmanship Program 2432:Civilian Marksmanship Program 2019:Experimental bullpup variant 1217: 985:Birmingham Small Arms Company 652:, gives the pronunciation as 389: 16:American semi-automatic rifle 6652:. p. 74. Archived from 6224:"Deniz Harp Okulu'nda tören" 6115:"Turkish Army in Korean War" 5941:Bak, Dongchan (March 2021). 5801:. p. 69. Archived from 5302:Bruce, Robert (April 2002). 5233:The National Firearms Museum 3894:. March 17, 1969. p. 13 3767:Katz, Sam (March 24, 1988). 3231:Geweer v/7,62 mm no. 2 S/aut 3138:Fucile «Garand» M1 cal. 7,62 2655:Ministry of National Defence 2299: 1427:to supplement the venerable 1349:Knowledge's inclusion policy 1170:which holds eight rounds of 1046:His Majesty The King's Guard 413:43.5 in (1,100 mm) 349:McCann Industries (civilian) 32:U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1 7: 7472:Mk 14 Enhanced Battle Rifle 7462:M39 Enhanced Marksman Rifle 6868:. Vol. 10, no. 6. 6727:. Men-at-Arms 221. London: 6691:. publisher not identified. 6309:. Men-at Arms 312. London: 4651:Rottman, Gordon L. (2006). 4570:U.S. Rifle, Caliber .30, M1 4250:Hatcher, Julian S. (1947). 3623:The M1903 Springfield Rifle 3537:U.S. rifle, caliber .30, M1 3455: 2653:and the Honor Guard of the 1315: 1056: 965:Harrington & Richardson 809:boards ran trials with the 323:Harrington & Richardson 164:Second Taiwan Strait Crisis 10: 7589: 6812:"A Persian take on the M1" 6622:] (in Italian). Roma: 6522:. Vol. 3, no. 8. 6284:"A Persian take on the M1" 5310:. Vol. 5, no. 7. 5133:Hook & Barrel Magazine 4503:Center of Military History 4340:. pp. 68–75 & 93. 4169:. Pen and Sword Military. 3695:The Bay of Pigs: Cuba 1961 2939:People's Republic of China 2436:not-for-profit corporation 1308:Another accessory was the 1174:ammunition. When the last 725: 650:U.S. Department of Defense 530:Front: wing protected post 424:24 in (609.6 mm) 264:Operation Uphold Democracy 99: 18: 7432: 7333: 7274: 7231: 7203: 7165: 7123: 7075: 6988:Springfield Armory Museum 6433:Smith, Joseph E. (1969). 6307:The Algerian War, 1954–62 5368:"The Mini Grows Up—Again" 4351:Brown, Jerold E. (2000). 3535:Officially designated as 3510: 3505:United States Army rifle 3503: 3495: 3039:. German designation was 2675:Japan Self-Defense Forces 1467:detrimental to accuracy. 1411:, formerly M1E7, and the 849:General Douglas MacArthur 746:M1 Garand displayed with 527:Rear: adjustable aperture 521: 503: 495: 485: 475: 456: 433: 428: 417: 409: 401: 396: 383: 372: 364: 356: 305: 297: 287: 282: 106: 93: 76: 71: 64:Place of origin 63: 53: 37: 30: 7457:M25 Sniper Weapon System 7452:M21 Sniper Weapon System 6860:Shea, Dan (March 2007). 6305:Windrow, Martin (1997). 5580:jwh1975 (June 9, 2015). 5304:"M14 vs. M16 in Vietnam" 4892:Canfield, Bruce (1998). 4778:George, John B. (1948). 3861:Thompson, Leroy (2012). 3832:Ball, Bill (June 2004). 3522: 3438:: Used by MNLF fighters. 2955:: 10,000 ex-British M1s. 2896:: Royal forces received 2486: 2393:Springfield Armory, Inc. 2177:Veterans of Foreign Wars 1563: 1236:operating rod engages a 1034:U.S. Air Force Auxiliary 981:Lee–Enfield No.1 Mk. III 926:General George S. Patton 801:In early 1928, both the 768:primer actuated blowback 499:500 yd (457 m) 344:Springfield Armory, Inc. 249:First Liberian Civil War 6534:Manuel du Grade TTA 116 6437:Small Arms of the World 5832:陸上自衛隊パーフェクトガイド2008–2009 5799:Oxford University Press 4996:Henry, Mark R. (2000). 4806:Dunlap, Roy F. (1948). 4590:Mangrum, Jamie (2004). 2842:magazines in the 1960s. 2601:Philippine Marine Corps 2229:Yon-shiki jidousyoujyuu 1294:Also available was the 1211:Aberdeen Proving Ground 1135:clip loaded with eight 1077:, eight-shot clip-fed, 961:International Harvester 862:M1903 Springfield rifle 789:, the latter two being 328:International Harvester 21:Garand (disambiguation) 7533:Rifles of the Cold War 7487:Springfield Armory M1A 6624:Ministero Della Difesa 6593:www.thefreelibrary.com 5560:www.thefreelibrary.com 5173:Rayle, Roy E. (2008). 4947:Bishop, Chris (2002). 4834:Bishop, Chris (2002). 4810:. The Samworth Press. 4808:Ordnance Went Up Front 4782:. The Samworth Press. 4743:Department of the Army 4707:. 2001. Archived from 4443:Cite journal requires 4405:Bishop, Chris (1998). 4064:The Book of the Garand 3545:US Rifle, Cal. .30, M1 3541:Rifle, Caliber .30, M1 3539:, later simply called 3467:Howell automatic rifle 3413: 2811:by Taliban insurgents. 2551: 2543: 2535: 2523: 2515: 2496: 2456:Department of the Army 2440:United States Congress 2428:United States citizens 2424: 2416: 2408: 2388: 2365:Sturm, Ruger & Co. 2352: 2309: 2272: 2220: 2098:Demilitarized versions 1886:, but not the reverse 1616:U.S. Navy designation 1613:U.S. Army designation 1573: 1400: 1389: 1272: 1264: 1227: 1160: 1148: 1140: 1066: 921: 913: 894: 886: 751: 739: 616:The Book of the Garand 477:Rate of fire 7251:Winchester Model 1912 7241:Winchester Model 1897 6922:on November 12, 2012. 6833:Walter, John (2006). 6659:on November 18, 2012. 6477:Ball, Willis (2002). 6341:Walter, John (2006). 5967:on September 20, 2022 5838:. 2008. p. 195. 5653:Walter, John (2006). 5544:. September 11, 2015. 5258:Walter, John (2006). 5235:. NRA. Archived from 4632:on September 15, 2008 4268:Walter, John (2006). 4207:Walter, John (2006). 3841:The Small Arms Review 3809:Bloomsbury Publishing 3668:McNab, Chris (2002). 3411: 3334:: Received 38,000 as 2549: 2541: 2529: 2521: 2502: 2494: 2444:congressional charter 2422: 2414: 2406: 2386: 2350: 2307: 2270: 2218: 2116:National Stock Number 1571: 1395: 1387: 1270: 1262: 1225: 1154: 1146: 1130: 1064: 1002:in 1963; despite the 957:Department of Defense 919: 900: 892: 884: 745: 733: 516:internal box magazine 224:Sandinista Revolution 134:1948 Arab–Israeli War 7548:Springfield firearms 7266:Stevens M520-30/M620 7185:M3/M3A1 'Grease gun' 7115:Colt Official Police 7085:M1911/M1911A1 pistol 7063:infantry weapons of 5808:on November 9, 2010. 5445:. September 1, 2010. 5217:on February 7, 2020. 4780:Shots Fired In Anger 4078:Pronounced with the 3850:on October 27, 2011. 3223:Geweer Garand 7,62mm 2616:Ceremonial uses only 2233:semi-automatic rifle 2190:Rechambered versions 2103:Demilitarized models 1079:semi-automatic rifle 548:semi-automatic rifle 487:Muzzle velocity 179:Bay of Pigs Invasion 139:Hukbalahap Rebellion 58:Semi-automatic rifle 7223:M7 grenade launcher 7157:M1941 Johnson Rifle 6960:"M1 Garand History" 6836:Rifles of the World 6344:Rifles of the World 6154:on February 5, 2016 6141:"Cyprus: Round Two" 6005:The Washington Post 5923:on October 30, 2021 5656:Rifles of the World 5542:Rock Island Auction 5355:on October 8, 2006. 5261:Rifles of the World 5058:on October 25, 2005 4953:Sterling Publishing 4928:on October 30, 2021 4840:Sterling Publishing 4714:on November 9, 2006 4270:Rifles of the World 4209:Rifles of the World 3072:1954 general strike 2375:locking mechanism. 2159:instructional use. 1856:, capable of using 1685:M1 Garand variant; 1296:M7 grenade launcher 1279:fit the rifle: the 1016:Army National Guard 940:for Italy, and the 846:Army Chief of Staff 603:on March 26, 1958. 214:Cambodian Civil War 199:Dominican Civil War 169:1958 Lebanon crisis 149:First Indochina War 144:Indo-Pakistani Wars 46:Swedish Army Museum 7467:M89SR sniper rifle 7378:.30-06 Springfield 7261:Remington Model 31 7195:United Defense M42 6964:Springfield Armory 6822:on April 22, 2023. 6294:on April 22, 2023. 5742:"Philippine CAFGU" 4705:Springfield Armory 4659:. pp. 27–28. 4602:on August 12, 2013 4545:on October 2, 2008 4252:Hatcher's Notebook 4060:Hatcher, Julian S. 3956:Springfield Armory 3607:2022-10-05 at the 3414: 3033:United States Army 2809:War in Afghanistan 2807:: Used during the 2651:Presidential Guard 2552: 2544: 2536: 2524: 2516: 2514:holding M1 Garands 2508:Presidential Guard 2497: 2425: 2417: 2409: 2389: 2363:, and produced by 2353: 2310: 2275:During the 1950s, 2273: 2221: 2181:ceremonial salutes 1793:direct gas system 1765:Springfield Armory 1750:Griffin & Howe 1574: 1554:Surrender of Japan 1449:Griffin & Howe 1401: 1390: 1273: 1265: 1228: 1172:.30-06 Springfield 1161: 1149: 1141: 1137:.30-06 Springfield 1069:The M1 rifle is a 1067: 922: 914: 895: 887: 764:Springfield Armory 752: 740: 571:.30-06 Springfield 443:.30-06 Springfield 313:Springfield Armory 283:Production history 244:War in Afghanistan 234:Lebanese Civil War 7505: 7504: 7442:Crazy Horse rifle 7391: 7390: 7325:M1A1 flamethrower 7300:M1941 Johnson LMG 7137:M1903 Springfield 7095:High Standard HDM 6902:American Rifleman 6866:Small Arms Review 6846:978-0-89689-241-5 6788:Osprey Publishing 6766:978-0-7106-1241-0 6738:978-0-85045-945-6 6729:Osprey Publishing 6670:Warner, Phillip. 6650:Small Arms Survey 6574:978-3-8370-4042-5 6520:Small Arms Review 6399:Small Arms Survey 6379:978-3-900310-53-0 6354:978-0-89689-241-5 6320:978-1-85532-658-3 6311:Osprey Publishing 6184:on April 29, 2014 6121:on April 29, 2014 5957:979-11-5598-079-8 5845:978-4-05-605141-4 5785:Small Arms Survey 5722:on March 29, 2015 5666:978-0-89689-241-5 5524:Small Arms Review 5491:on March 9, 2016. 5424:February 10, 1996 5308:Small Arms Review 5288:M2(1005-711-6202) 5271:978-0-89689-241-5 5239:on March 27, 2014 5184:978-1-4357-5021-0 5091:American Rifleman 5052:SniperCentral.com 5009:978-1-85532-995-9 4962:978-1-58663-762-0 4865:American Rifleman 4849:978-1-58663-762-0 4817:978-1-884849-09-1 4666:978-1-84176-972-1 4657:Osprey Publishing 4519:. March 15, 2021. 4470:. pp. 54–99. 4468:American Rifleman 4416:978-0-7607-1022-7 4391:978-0-87341-824-9 4366:978-0-313-29322-1 4338:American Rifleman 4279:978-0-89689-241-5 4218:978-0-89689-241-5 4176:978-1-5267-5621-3 4142:American Rifleman 4115:Armed Forces Talk 4038:American Rifleman 3991:978-1-55862-405-4 3936:978-0-88254-436-6 3874:978-1-84908-621-9 3818:978-1-84908-621-9 3786:978-0-85045-800-8 3753:978-0-85045-451-2 3704:978-1-84603-323-0 3679:978-1-84013-476-6 3655:Gazette des Armes 3628:Osprey Publishing 3520: 3519: 3511:Succeeded by 3499:M1903 Springfield 3478:Remington Model 8 3035:, limited use in 2754:ceremonial weapon 2701:ceremonial weapon 2693:Republic of China 2679:ceremonial weapon 2555:Current operators 2480:John F. Kennedy's 2454:and later in the 2452:Department of War 2438:chartered by the 2357:L. James Sullivan 2187: 2186: 2167:1005-01-095-0085 2152:1005-01-113-3767 2141:1005-01-061-2456 2130:1005-00-599-3289 2095: 2094: 1482:folding buttstock 1444:U.S. Marine Corps 1377: 1376: 1369: 1098:The rifle has an 936:for Germany, the 930:bolt-action rifle 687:American Rifleman 646:Armed Forces Talk 594:M1903 Springfield 583:autoloading rifle 575:Canadian-American 536: 535: 229:Angolan Civil War 189:Laotian Civil War 119:Chinese Civil War 7580: 7418: 7411: 7404: 7395: 7394: 7110:Colt New Service 7054: 7047: 7040: 7031: 7030: 7024:Internet Archive 7011:Internet Archive 6999: 6991: 6979: 6967: 6954:Internet Archive 6946: 6934: 6923: 6921: 6906: 6882: 6876: 6870: 6869: 6857: 6851: 6850: 6830: 6824: 6823: 6816:The Firearm Blog 6808: 6802: 6801: 6777: 6771: 6770: 6752: 6743: 6742: 6720: 6714: 6713: 6699: 6693: 6692: 6682: 6676: 6675: 6667: 6661: 6660: 6658: 6643: 6634: 6628: 6627: 6610: 6604: 6603: 6601: 6599: 6585: 6579: 6578: 6566: 6556: 6550: 6544: 6538: 6537: 6530: 6524: 6523: 6511: 6505: 6504: 6502: 6500: 6494: 6488:. Archived from 6483: 6474: 6465: 6459: 6453: 6452: 6440: 6430: 6424: 6417: 6411: 6410: 6408: 6406: 6390: 6384: 6383: 6365: 6359: 6358: 6338: 6325: 6324: 6302: 6296: 6295: 6288:The Firearm Blog 6280: 6274: 6268: 6262: 6261: 6250: 6244: 6243: 6241: 6239: 6228:Deniz Harp Okulu 6220: 6214: 6213: 6200: 6194: 6193: 6191: 6189: 6180:. Archived from 6170: 6164: 6163: 6161: 6159: 6153: 6137: 6131: 6130: 6128: 6126: 6117:. Archived from 6111: 6105: 6104: 6102: 6100: 6085: 6079: 6078: 6076: 6074: 6058: 6052: 6051: 6049: 6047: 6031: 6025: 6024: 6022: 6020: 5995: 5989: 5983: 5977: 5976: 5974: 5972: 5966: 5960:. Archived from 5949: 5938: 5932: 5931: 5930: 5928: 5919:, archived from 5911: 5905: 5904: 5902: 5900: 5884: 5878: 5877: 5870: 5864: 5863: 5856: 5850: 5849: 5828: 5822: 5816: 5810: 5809: 5807: 5781: 5775: 5774: 5773:. April 7, 2017. 5771:The Firearm Blog 5763: 5757: 5756: 5754: 5752: 5738: 5732: 5731: 5729: 5727: 5718:. Archived from 5708: 5702: 5701: 5699: 5697: 5692:on March 6, 2012 5677: 5671: 5670: 5650: 5611: 5610: 5604: 5596: 5594: 5592: 5577: 5571: 5570: 5568: 5566: 5552: 5546: 5545: 5534: 5528: 5527: 5515: 5509: 5508: 5499: 5493: 5492: 5487:. Archived from 5476: 5470: 5469: 5456: 5447: 5446: 5435: 5426: 5425: 5406: 5402: 5397: 5391: 5390: 5386: 5380: 5379: 5374:. Archived from 5363: 5357: 5356: 5351:. Archived from 5349:National Defense 5340: 5334: 5333: 5318: 5312: 5311: 5299: 5293: 5292: 5282: 5276: 5275: 5255: 5249: 5248: 5246: 5244: 5225: 5219: 5218: 5207: 5201: 5195: 5189: 5188: 5170: 5157: 5151: 5145: 5144: 5142: 5140: 5135:. March 26, 2024 5125: 5119: 5118: 5111: 5100: 5099: 5085: 5068: 5067: 5065: 5063: 5054:. Archived from 5043: 5037: 5036: 5025: 5014: 5013: 4993: 4987: 4986: 4973: 4967: 4966: 4944: 4938: 4937: 4935: 4933: 4914: 4908: 4907: 4889: 4883: 4882: 4876: 4868: 4860: 4854: 4853: 4831: 4822: 4821: 4803: 4794: 4793: 4775: 4764: 4761: 4755: 4754: 4752: 4750: 4735: 4724: 4723: 4721: 4719: 4713: 4702: 4694: 4688: 4687: 4677: 4671: 4670: 4648: 4642: 4641: 4639: 4637: 4628:. Archived from 4618: 4612: 4611: 4609: 4607: 4598:. Archived from 4596:SurplusRifle.com 4587: 4578: 4577: 4575: 4564: 4555: 4554: 4552: 4550: 4541:. Archived from 4530: 4521: 4520: 4513: 4507: 4506: 4495: 4489: 4483: 4472: 4471: 4463: 4454: 4452: 4446: 4441: 4439: 4431: 4427: 4421: 4420: 4402: 4396: 4395: 4377: 4371: 4370: 4358: 4348: 4342: 4341: 4333: 4327: 4326: 4324: 4322: 4308: 4302: 4301: 4293: 4284: 4283: 4265: 4256: 4255: 4247: 4236: 4229: 4223: 4222: 4204: 4181: 4180: 4160: 4154: 4153: 4151: 4149: 4133: 4127: 4126: 4124: 4122: 4107: 4101: 4100: 4056: 4050: 4049: 4047: 4045: 4028: 4022: 4021: 4019: 4017: 4002: 3996: 3995: 3977: 3968: 3967: 3965: 3963: 3947: 3941: 3940: 3922: 3916: 3910: 3904: 3903: 3901: 3899: 3893: 3885: 3879: 3878: 3858: 3852: 3851: 3849: 3838: 3829: 3823: 3822: 3797: 3791: 3790: 3774: 3764: 3758: 3757: 3739: 3733: 3732: 3726: 3715: 3709: 3708: 3690: 3684: 3683: 3665: 3659: 3658: 3648: 3642: 3641: 3617: 3611: 3598: 3581: 3577: 3571: 3568: 3556: 3553: 3547: 3533: 3496:Preceded by 3493: 3492: 3445: 3434: 3432: 3431: 3423:Iraqi insurgents 3417:Non-state actors 3400: 3398: 3397: 3386: 3384: 3383: 3374: 3372: 3371: 3360: 3358: 3357: 3347: 3345: 3344: 3330: 3328: 3327: 3316: 3314: 3313: 3302: 3300: 3299: 3288: 3286: 3285: 3275: 3273: 3272: 3261: 3259: 3258: 3247: 3245: 3244: 3217: 3215: 3214: 3204: 3202: 3201: 3190: 3188: 3187: 3176: 3174: 3173: 3163: 3161: 3160: 3150: 3148: 3147: 3128: 3126: 3125: 3114: 3112: 3111: 3103: 3099: 3097: 3096: 3084: 3082: 3081: 3066: 3064: 3063: 3052: 3050: 3049: 3031:: Captured from 3030: 3026: 3024: 3023: 3007: 3005: 3004: 2993: 2991: 2990: 2979: 2977: 2976: 2965: 2963: 2962: 2951: 2949: 2948: 2937: 2935: 2934: 2924: 2922: 2921: 2910: 2908: 2907: 2892: 2890: 2889: 2870: 2868: 2867: 2852: 2850: 2849: 2834: 2832: 2831: 2821: 2819: 2818: 2806: 2802: 2800: 2799: 2789:Former operators 2778:Civil Air Patrol 2768: 2766: 2765: 2740: 2738: 2737: 2713: 2711: 2710: 2691: 2689: 2688: 2673:: Issued to the 2669: 2667: 2666: 2645: 2643: 2642: 2628: 2626: 2625: 2595: 2593: 2592: 2581: 2579: 2578: 2567: 2565: 2564: 2512:Greek Parliament 2510:in front of the 2468:State Department 2361:William B. Ruger 2241:7.7×58mm Arisaka 2202:require a tool. 2127:Caliber .30, M1 2109: 2108: 1610: 1609: 1597: 1596: 1592: 1589: 1556:in August 1945. 1417:telescopic sight 1398:flash suppressor 1372: 1365: 1361: 1358: 1352: 1328: 1327: 1320: 1209:the U.S. Army's 1155:Unloading an M1 1040:(ROTC) and some 811:.276 Pedersen T1 791:delayed blowback 781:, Hatcher-Bang, 721: 720: 717: 716: 713: 710: 707: 704: 701: 698: 683: 682: 679: 678: 675: 672: 669: 666: 663: 660: 643: 642: 639: 638: 635: 632: 629: 626: 613:Julian Hatcher's 587:George S. Patton 504:Feed system 481:40–50 rounds/min 375: 274:Syrian civil war 174:Cuban Revolution 42: 33: 28: 27: 7588: 7587: 7583: 7582: 7581: 7579: 7578: 7577: 7508: 7507: 7506: 7501: 7428: 7422: 7392: 7387: 7329: 7320:M2 flamethrower 7270: 7256:Browning Auto-5 7227: 7199: 7190:Reising M50/M55 7167:Submachine guns 7161: 7119: 7071: 7058: 7016:The short film 7003:The short film 6994: 6982: 6976:Popular Science 6970: 6958: 6937: 6919: 6909: 6891: 6886: 6885: 6877: 6873: 6858: 6854: 6847: 6831: 6827: 6810: 6809: 6805: 6798: 6786:. Warrior 135. 6778: 6774: 6767: 6753: 6746: 6739: 6721: 6717: 6700: 6696: 6683: 6679: 6668: 6664: 6656: 6641: 6635: 6631: 6612: 6611: 6607: 6597: 6595: 6587: 6586: 6582: 6575: 6564: 6558: 6557: 6553: 6545: 6541: 6532: 6531: 6527: 6512: 6508: 6498: 6496: 6492: 6481: 6475: 6468: 6460: 6456: 6449: 6431: 6427: 6421:Without Warning 6418: 6414: 6404: 6402: 6391: 6387: 6380: 6366: 6362: 6355: 6339: 6328: 6321: 6303: 6299: 6282: 6281: 6277: 6269: 6265: 6252: 6251: 6247: 6237: 6235: 6222: 6221: 6217: 6202: 6201: 6197: 6187: 6185: 6172: 6171: 6167: 6157: 6155: 6151: 6139: 6138: 6134: 6124: 6122: 6113: 6112: 6108: 6098: 6096: 6087: 6086: 6082: 6072: 6070: 6059: 6055: 6045: 6043: 6032: 6028: 6018: 6016: 5996: 5992: 5984: 5980: 5970: 5968: 5964: 5958: 5947: 5939: 5935: 5926: 5924: 5913: 5912: 5908: 5898: 5896: 5885: 5881: 5872: 5871: 5867: 5858: 5857: 5853: 5846: 5830: 5829: 5825: 5817: 5813: 5805: 5782: 5778: 5765: 5764: 5760: 5750: 5748: 5746:Photobucket.com 5740: 5739: 5735: 5725: 5723: 5710: 5709: 5705: 5695: 5693: 5678: 5674: 5667: 5651: 5614: 5598: 5597: 5590: 5588: 5578: 5574: 5564: 5562: 5554: 5553: 5549: 5536: 5535: 5531: 5516: 5512: 5501: 5500: 5496: 5485:Huffington Post 5477: 5473: 5465:The Chosun Ilbo 5458: 5457: 5450: 5437: 5436: 5429: 5404: 5398: 5394: 5388: 5387: 5383: 5378:on May 3, 2010. 5364: 5360: 5341: 5337: 5320: 5319: 5315: 5300: 5296: 5284: 5283: 5279: 5272: 5256: 5252: 5242: 5240: 5227: 5226: 5222: 5209: 5208: 5204: 5196: 5192: 5185: 5171: 5160: 5152: 5148: 5138: 5136: 5127: 5126: 5122: 5113: 5112: 5103: 5086: 5071: 5061: 5059: 5044: 5040: 5027: 5026: 5017: 5010: 4994: 4990: 4982:Popular Science 4975: 4974: 4970: 4963: 4955:. p. 214. 4945: 4941: 4931: 4929: 4916: 4915: 4911: 4904: 4890: 4886: 4870: 4869: 4861: 4857: 4850: 4842:. p. 223. 4832: 4825: 4818: 4804: 4797: 4790: 4776: 4767: 4762: 4758: 4748: 4746: 4737: 4736: 4727: 4717: 4715: 4711: 4700: 4696: 4695: 4691: 4678: 4674: 4667: 4649: 4645: 4635: 4633: 4620: 4619: 4615: 4605: 4603: 4588: 4581: 4573: 4565: 4558: 4548: 4546: 4533:Popenker, Max. 4531: 4524: 4515: 4514: 4510: 4497: 4496: 4492: 4484: 4475: 4464: 4457: 4444: 4442: 4433: 4432: 4429: 4428: 4424: 4417: 4403: 4399: 4392: 4378: 4374: 4367: 4349: 4345: 4334: 4330: 4320: 4318: 4310: 4309: 4305: 4294: 4287: 4280: 4266: 4259: 4248: 4239: 4230: 4226: 4219: 4205: 4184: 4177: 4161: 4157: 4147: 4145: 4134: 4130: 4120: 4118: 4109: 4108: 4104: 4074: 4057: 4053: 4043: 4041: 4029: 4025: 4015: 4013: 4003: 3999: 3992: 3978: 3971: 3961: 3959: 3949: 3948: 3944: 3937: 3923: 3919: 3911: 3907: 3897: 3895: 3891: 3887: 3886: 3882: 3875: 3859: 3855: 3847: 3836: 3830: 3826: 3819: 3798: 3794: 3787: 3765: 3761: 3754: 3740: 3736: 3724: 3716: 3712: 3705: 3691: 3687: 3680: 3666: 3662: 3650: 3649: 3645: 3638: 3618: 3614: 3609:Wayback Machine 3599: 3595: 3590: 3585: 3584: 3578: 3574: 3569: 3565: 3560: 3559: 3554: 3550: 3534: 3530: 3525: 3516: 3507: 3501: 3458: 3452: 3429: 3427: 3419: 3395: 3393: 3381: 3379: 3369: 3367: 3355: 3353: 3342: 3340: 3325: 3323: 3311: 3309: 3297: 3295: 3283: 3281: 3270: 3268: 3256: 3254: 3242: 3240: 3212: 3210: 3199: 3197: 3192:Kingdom of Laos 3185: 3183: 3171: 3169: 3165:Empire of Japan 3158: 3156: 3145: 3143: 3123: 3121: 3109: 3107: 3094: 3092: 3079: 3077: 3061: 3059: 3047: 3045: 3021: 3019: 3002: 3000: 2988: 2986: 2974: 2972: 2960: 2958: 2946: 2944: 2932: 2930: 2919: 2917: 2905: 2903: 2887: 2885: 2865: 2863: 2847: 2845: 2829: 2827: 2816: 2814: 2797: 2795: 2791: 2763: 2761: 2750:1974 Cyprus War 2735: 2733: 2708: 2706: 2686: 2684: 2664: 2662: 2640: 2638: 2623: 2621: 2618: 2590: 2588: 2576: 2574: 2562: 2560: 2557: 2489: 2401: 2387:M1 Garand rifle 2381: 2351:Ruger Mini-14GB 2345: 2329:.308 Winchester 2321:automatic rifle 2302: 2265: 2219:Japanese Type 4 2213: 2211:Japanese Type 4 2208: 2196:7.92×57 mm 2192: 2173:American Legion 2126: 2100: 1912:, magazine-fed 1687:prismatic scope 1608: 1606:Quick reference 1594: 1590: 1587: 1585: 1566: 1529:Noemfoor Island 1473: 1382: 1373: 1362: 1356: 1353: 1339:Please help by 1338: 1329: 1325: 1318: 1257: 1220: 1125: 1059: 1054: 950:fully automatic 879: 760:French Canadian 757: 734:M1 Garand with 728: 695: 691: 657: 653: 623: 619: 609: 452: 429: 352: 278: 219:Black September 89: 77:In service 72:Service history 49: 31: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 7586: 7576: 7575: 7570: 7565: 7560: 7555: 7550: 7545: 7540: 7535: 7530: 7525: 7520: 7503: 7502: 7500: 7499: 7494: 7489: 7484: 7479: 7474: 7469: 7464: 7459: 7454: 7449: 7444: 7439: 7433: 7430: 7429: 7421: 7420: 7413: 7406: 7398: 7389: 7388: 7386: 7385: 7380: 7375: 7370: 7365: 7360: 7355: 7350: 7345: 7339: 7337: 7331: 7330: 7328: 7327: 7322: 7317: 7312: 7307: 7302: 7297: 7295:M1919 Browning 7292: 7287: 7285:M1917 Browning 7281: 7279: 7272: 7271: 7269: 7268: 7263: 7258: 7253: 7248: 7243: 7237: 7235: 7229: 7228: 7226: 7225: 7220: 7215: 7209: 7207: 7201: 7200: 7198: 7197: 7192: 7187: 7182: 7177: 7171: 7169: 7163: 7162: 7160: 7159: 7154: 7149: 7144: 7139: 7133: 7131: 7121: 7120: 7118: 7117: 7112: 7107: 7102: 7100:M1917 revolver 7097: 7092: 7087: 7081: 7079: 7073: 7072: 7057: 7056: 7049: 7042: 7034: 7028: 7027: 7014: 7001: 6992: 6980: 6968: 6956: 6947: 6935: 6924: 6907: 6890: 6889:External links 6887: 6884: 6883: 6871: 6852: 6845: 6825: 6803: 6796: 6790:. p. 32. 6772: 6765: 6744: 6737: 6731:. p. 19. 6715: 6694: 6677: 6662: 6629: 6605: 6580: 6573: 6551: 6539: 6525: 6506: 6495:on May 9, 2006 6466: 6454: 6447: 6425: 6412: 6385: 6378: 6360: 6353: 6326: 6319: 6313:. p. 46. 6297: 6275: 6263: 6258:Bernard Gagnon 6245: 6215: 6195: 6165: 6132: 6106: 6080: 6053: 6026: 5990: 5978: 5956: 5933: 5906: 5879: 5865: 5851: 5844: 5823: 5821:, p. 494. 5811: 5776: 5758: 5733: 5716:Arsenal.mil.ph 5703: 5672: 5665: 5612: 5572: 5547: 5529: 5510: 5494: 5471: 5448: 5427: 5409:104–106 (text) 5392: 5381: 5358: 5335: 5313: 5294: 5277: 5270: 5250: 5220: 5202: 5190: 5183: 5158: 5146: 5120: 5101: 5069: 5038: 5015: 5008: 4988: 4968: 4961: 4939: 4909: 4902: 4884: 4855: 4848: 4823: 4816: 4795: 4788: 4765: 4756: 4725: 4689: 4672: 4665: 4643: 4613: 4579: 4556: 4522: 4508: 4490: 4473: 4455: 4445:|journal= 4422: 4415: 4397: 4390: 4372: 4365: 4343: 4328: 4316:Olive-Drab.com 4303: 4285: 4278: 4257: 4237: 4224: 4217: 4182: 4175: 4155: 4128: 4102: 4072: 4051: 4023: 3997: 3990: 3969: 3942: 3935: 3917: 3905: 3880: 3873: 3853: 3824: 3817: 3811:. p. 62. 3792: 3785: 3759: 3752: 3734: 3731:. p. 123. 3710: 3703: 3685: 3678: 3660: 3643: 3636: 3630:. p. 63. 3612: 3592: 3591: 3589: 3586: 3583: 3582: 3572: 3562: 3561: 3558: 3557: 3548: 3543:, also called 3527: 3526: 3524: 3521: 3518: 3517: 3512: 3509: 3502: 3497: 3491: 3490: 3485: 3480: 3475: 3469: 3464: 3457: 3454: 3450: 3449: 3439: 3425: 3418: 3415: 3406: 3405: 3391: 3365: 3351: 3338: 3332:United Kingdom 3321: 3307: 3293: 3279: 3266: 3252: 3238: 3208: 3195: 3181: 3167: 3154: 3141: 3119: 3105: 3089: 3075: 3057: 3043: 3016: 2998: 2984: 2970: 2956: 2942: 2928: 2915: 2901: 2883: 2876:7.62×51mm NATO 2861: 2843: 2825: 2812: 2790: 2787: 2786: 2785: 2758: 2757: 2731: 2704: 2682: 2659: 2658: 2636: 2634:Belgian Police 2617: 2614: 2613: 2612: 2586: 2572: 2556: 2553: 2488: 2485: 2400: 2397: 2380: 2377: 2344: 2341: 2325:7.62×51mm NATO 2318:selective fire 2301: 2298: 2289:7.62×51mm NATO 2264: 2263:Beretta models 2261: 2252:stripper clips 2212: 2209: 2207: 2204: 2191: 2188: 2185: 2184: 2168: 2165: 2161: 2160: 2153: 2150: 2146: 2145: 2142: 2139: 2135: 2134: 2131: 2128: 2122: 2121: 2118: 2113: 2099: 2096: 2093: 2092: 2089: 2086: 2082: 2081: 2077: 2074: 2070: 2069: 2066: 2063: 2059: 2058: 2051: 2048: 2044: 2043: 2040:stripper clips 2032:7.62×51mm NATO 2028: 2025: 2021: 2020: 2017: 2014: 2010: 2009: 2003: 2000: 1996: 1995: 1991: 1988: 1984: 1983: 1980: 1977: 1973: 1972: 1965: 1962: 1958: 1957: 1954: 1951: 1947: 1946: 1943: 1940: 1936: 1935: 1932: 1929: 1925: 1924: 1921: 1918: 1914: 1913: 1906: 1903: 1899: 1898: 1895: 1892: 1888: 1887: 1880: 1877: 1873: 1872: 1869: 1866: 1862: 1861: 1850: 1847: 1843: 1842: 1839:7.62×51mm NATO 1835: 1832: 1828: 1827: 1824: 1821: 1817: 1816: 1813: 1810: 1806: 1805: 1802: 1799: 1795: 1794: 1787: 1784: 1780: 1779: 1776: 1773: 1769: 1768: 1761: 1758: 1754: 1753: 1746: 1743: 1739: 1738: 1735: 1732: 1728: 1727: 1724: 1721: 1717: 1716: 1713: 1710: 1706: 1705: 1698: 1695: 1691: 1690: 1683: 1680: 1676: 1675: 1672: 1669: 1665: 1664: 1661: 1658: 1654: 1653: 1650: 1647: 1643: 1642: 1639: 1636: 1632: 1631: 1628: 1625: 1621: 1620: 1617: 1614: 1607: 1604: 1565: 1562: 1505:Garand carbine 1472: 1469: 1461:7.62×51mm NATO 1381: 1378: 1375: 1374: 1332: 1330: 1323: 1317: 1314: 1310:winter trigger 1256: 1253: 1219: 1216: 1147:Loading the M1 1124: 1118: 1058: 1055: 1053: 1052:Design details 1050: 878: 875: 795:Ordnance Board 756: 753: 727: 724: 608: 605: 598:selective-fire 534: 533: 532: 531: 528: 523: 519: 518: 505: 501: 500: 497: 493: 492: 489: 483: 482: 479: 473: 472: 460: 454: 453: 451: 450: 448:7.62×51mm NATO 445: 439: 437: 431: 430: 426: 425: 422: 415: 414: 411: 407: 406: 403: 399: 398: 397:Specifications 394: 393: 385: 381: 380: 377: 370: 369: 366: 362: 361: 358: 357:Unit cost 354: 353: 351: 350: 347: 341: 338: 335: 330: 325: 320: 315: 309: 307: 303: 302: 299: 295: 294: 292:John C. Garand 289: 285: 284: 280: 279: 277: 276: 271: 266: 261: 256: 251: 246: 241: 236: 231: 226: 221: 216: 211: 206: 201: 196: 191: 186: 181: 176: 171: 166: 161: 156: 151: 146: 141: 136: 131: 126: 121: 116: 110: 108: 104: 103: 95: 91: 90: 88: 87: 84: 80: 78: 74: 73: 69: 68: 65: 61: 60: 55: 51: 50: 43: 35: 34: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 7585: 7574: 7571: 7569: 7566: 7564: 7561: 7559: 7556: 7554: 7551: 7549: 7546: 7544: 7541: 7539: 7536: 7534: 7531: 7529: 7526: 7524: 7521: 7519: 7516: 7515: 7513: 7498: 7495: 7493: 7490: 7488: 7485: 7483: 7480: 7478: 7477:Ruger Mini-14 7475: 7473: 7470: 7468: 7465: 7463: 7460: 7458: 7455: 7453: 7450: 7448: 7445: 7443: 7440: 7438: 7437:Beretta BM 59 7435: 7434: 7431: 7426: 7419: 7414: 7412: 7407: 7405: 7400: 7399: 7396: 7384: 7381: 7379: 7376: 7374: 7371: 7369: 7366: 7364: 7361: 7359: 7356: 7354: 7351: 7349: 7346: 7344: 7341: 7340: 7338: 7336: 7332: 7326: 7323: 7321: 7318: 7316: 7313: 7311: 7308: 7306: 7303: 7301: 7298: 7296: 7293: 7291: 7288: 7286: 7283: 7282: 7280: 7277: 7273: 7267: 7264: 7262: 7259: 7257: 7254: 7252: 7249: 7247: 7244: 7242: 7239: 7238: 7236: 7234: 7230: 7224: 7221: 7219: 7216: 7214: 7211: 7210: 7208: 7206: 7202: 7196: 7193: 7191: 7188: 7186: 7183: 7181: 7178: 7176: 7173: 7172: 7170: 7168: 7164: 7158: 7155: 7153: 7150: 7148: 7145: 7143: 7142:M1917 Enfield 7140: 7138: 7135: 7134: 7132: 7130: 7126: 7122: 7116: 7113: 7111: 7108: 7106: 7103: 7101: 7098: 7096: 7093: 7091: 7088: 7086: 7083: 7082: 7080: 7078: 7074: 7070: 7066: 7062: 7055: 7050: 7048: 7043: 7041: 7036: 7035: 7032: 7025: 7021: 7020: 7015: 7012: 7008: 7007: 7002: 6997: 6993: 6989: 6985: 6981: 6977: 6973: 6969: 6965: 6961: 6957: 6955: 6952: at the 6951: 6948: 6944: 6943:Fulton Armory 6940: 6936: 6932: 6931: 6925: 6918: 6914: 6913: 6908: 6904: 6903: 6898: 6893: 6892: 6881:, p. 68. 6880: 6879:Thompson 2012 6875: 6867: 6863: 6856: 6848: 6842: 6838: 6837: 6829: 6821: 6817: 6813: 6807: 6799: 6797:9781846033711 6793: 6789: 6785: 6784: 6776: 6768: 6762: 6758: 6751: 6749: 6740: 6734: 6730: 6726: 6719: 6711: 6710: 6705: 6698: 6690: 6689: 6681: 6673: 6666: 6655: 6651: 6647: 6640: 6633: 6625: 6621: 6617: 6616: 6609: 6594: 6590: 6584: 6576: 6570: 6563: 6562: 6555: 6549:, p. 44. 6548: 6547:Thompson 2012 6543: 6535: 6529: 6521: 6517: 6510: 6491: 6487: 6480: 6473: 6471: 6464:, p. 74. 6463: 6462:Thompson 2012 6458: 6450: 6448:9780811715669 6444: 6439: 6438: 6429: 6423:by Clive Law. 6422: 6416: 6405:September 23, 6400: 6396: 6389: 6381: 6375: 6371: 6364: 6356: 6350: 6346: 6345: 6337: 6335: 6333: 6331: 6322: 6316: 6312: 6308: 6301: 6293: 6289: 6285: 6279: 6272: 6271:Thompson 2012 6267: 6259: 6255: 6249: 6233: 6229: 6225: 6219: 6211: 6210: 6205: 6199: 6183: 6179: 6175: 6169: 6158:September 23, 6150: 6146: 6142: 6136: 6120: 6116: 6110: 6094: 6090: 6084: 6068: 6064: 6057: 6041: 6037: 6030: 6015: 6011: 6007: 6006: 6001: 5994: 5988:, p. 67. 5987: 5986:Thompson 2012 5982: 5963: 5959: 5953: 5946: 5945: 5937: 5922: 5918: 5917: 5910: 5894: 5890: 5883: 5875: 5869: 5861: 5855: 5847: 5841: 5837: 5833: 5827: 5820: 5815: 5804: 5800: 5796: 5795: 5790: 5786: 5780: 5772: 5768: 5762: 5751:September 23, 5747: 5743: 5737: 5721: 5717: 5713: 5707: 5691: 5687: 5683: 5676: 5668: 5662: 5658: 5657: 5649: 5647: 5645: 5643: 5641: 5639: 5637: 5635: 5633: 5631: 5629: 5627: 5625: 5623: 5621: 5619: 5617: 5608: 5602: 5587: 5586:wwiiafterwwii 5583: 5576: 5561: 5557: 5551: 5543: 5539: 5533: 5525: 5521: 5514: 5506: 5505: 5498: 5490: 5486: 5482: 5475: 5467: 5466: 5461: 5455: 5453: 5444: 5440: 5434: 5432: 5421: 5417: 5413: 5410: 5403: 5396: 5385: 5377: 5373: 5372:Rifle Shooter 5369: 5362: 5354: 5350: 5346: 5339: 5332: 5328: 5324: 5317: 5309: 5305: 5298: 5290: 5289: 5281: 5273: 5267: 5263: 5262: 5254: 5238: 5234: 5230: 5224: 5216: 5212: 5206: 5200: 5194: 5186: 5180: 5176: 5169: 5167: 5165: 5163: 5156:, p. 38. 5155: 5154:Thompson 2012 5150: 5134: 5130: 5124: 5116: 5110: 5108: 5106: 5097: 5093: 5092: 5084: 5082: 5080: 5078: 5076: 5074: 5057: 5053: 5049: 5042: 5034: 5030: 5024: 5022: 5020: 5011: 5005: 5001: 5000: 4992: 4984: 4983: 4978: 4972: 4964: 4958: 4954: 4950: 4943: 4927: 4923: 4919: 4913: 4905: 4903:0-917218-83-3 4899: 4895: 4888: 4880: 4874: 4866: 4859: 4851: 4845: 4841: 4837: 4830: 4828: 4819: 4813: 4809: 4802: 4800: 4791: 4789:0-935998-42-X 4785: 4781: 4774: 4772: 4770: 4760: 4744: 4740: 4734: 4732: 4730: 4710: 4706: 4699: 4693: 4686:. p. 44. 4685: 4684: 4676: 4668: 4662: 4658: 4654: 4647: 4631: 4627: 4623: 4617: 4601: 4597: 4593: 4586: 4584: 4572: 4571: 4563: 4561: 4544: 4540: 4536: 4529: 4527: 4518: 4512: 4504: 4500: 4494: 4488:, p. 59. 4487: 4486:Thompson 2012 4482: 4480: 4478: 4469: 4462: 4460: 4450: 4437: 4426: 4418: 4412: 4408: 4401: 4393: 4387: 4383: 4376: 4368: 4362: 4357: 4356: 4347: 4339: 4332: 4317: 4313: 4307: 4299: 4292: 4290: 4281: 4275: 4271: 4264: 4262: 4253: 4246: 4244: 4242: 4234: 4228: 4220: 4214: 4210: 4203: 4201: 4199: 4197: 4195: 4193: 4191: 4189: 4187: 4178: 4172: 4168: 4167: 4159: 4143: 4139: 4132: 4116: 4112: 4106: 4099: 4097: 4093: 4089: 4085: 4081: 4075: 4073:0-88227-014-1 4069: 4065: 4061: 4055: 4040: 4039: 4034: 4027: 4012: 4008: 4005:Seijas, Bob. 4001: 3993: 3987: 3983: 3976: 3974: 3958: 3957: 3952: 3946: 3938: 3932: 3928: 3921: 3915: 3909: 3890: 3884: 3876: 3870: 3866: 3865: 3864:The M1 Garand 3857: 3846: 3842: 3835: 3828: 3820: 3814: 3810: 3806: 3802: 3801:Taylor, Peter 3796: 3788: 3782: 3778: 3773: 3772: 3763: 3755: 3749: 3745: 3738: 3730: 3723: 3722: 3714: 3706: 3700: 3696: 3689: 3681: 3675: 3671: 3664: 3656: 3653: 3647: 3639: 3637:9781780960111 3633: 3629: 3626:. Weapon 23. 3625: 3624: 3616: 3610: 3606: 3603: 3597: 3593: 3576: 3567: 3563: 3552: 3546: 3542: 3538: 3532: 3528: 3515: 3506: 3500: 3494: 3489: 3486: 3484: 3481: 3479: 3476: 3473: 3470: 3468: 3465: 3463: 3460: 3459: 3453: 3448: 3444: 3440: 3437: 3426: 3424: 3421: 3420: 3410: 3403: 3402:South Vietnam 3392: 3389: 3377: 3376:North Vietnam 3366: 3363: 3352: 3350: 3339: 3337: 3333: 3322: 3319: 3308: 3305: 3294: 3291: 3280: 3278: 3267: 3264: 3253: 3250: 3239: 3236: 3232: 3228: 3224: 3220: 3209: 3207: 3196: 3193: 3182: 3179: 3168: 3166: 3155: 3153: 3142: 3139: 3135: 3131: 3120: 3117: 3106: 3102: 3090: 3087: 3076: 3073: 3069: 3058: 3055: 3044: 3042: 3038: 3034: 3029: 3017: 3014: 3010: 2999: 2996: 2985: 2982: 2971: 2968: 2957: 2954: 2943: 2940: 2929: 2927: 2916: 2913: 2902: 2899: 2895: 2884: 2881: 2877: 2873: 2862: 2859: 2855: 2844: 2841: 2840:Beretta BM 59 2837: 2826: 2824: 2813: 2810: 2805: 2793: 2792: 2783: 2779: 2775: 2771: 2770:United States 2760: 2759: 2755: 2751: 2747: 2743: 2732: 2728: 2724: 2720: 2716: 2705: 2702: 2698: 2695:: Aiding the 2694: 2683: 2680: 2676: 2672: 2661: 2660: 2656: 2652: 2648: 2637: 2635: 2631: 2620: 2619: 2610: 2606: 2602: 2598: 2587: 2584: 2573: 2570: 2559: 2558: 2548: 2540: 2533: 2528: 2520: 2513: 2509: 2505: 2501: 2493: 2484: 2481: 2476: 2472: 2469: 2463: 2461: 2457: 2453: 2449: 2445: 2441: 2437: 2433: 2429: 2421: 2413: 2405: 2396: 2394: 2385: 2376: 2374: 2370: 2369:Mini-14 rifle 2366: 2362: 2358: 2349: 2343:Ruger Mini-14 2340: 2338: 2334: 2330: 2326: 2322: 2319: 2315: 2306: 2297: 2295: 2290: 2286: 2282: 2278: 2269: 2260: 2258: 2253: 2249: 2247: 2242: 2238: 2234: 2230: 2226: 2217: 2203: 2199: 2197: 2182: 2178: 2174: 2169: 2166: 2163: 2162: 2158: 2154: 2151: 2148: 2147: 2143: 2140: 2137: 2136: 2132: 2129: 2125:Rifle, Inert, 2124: 2123: 2119: 2117: 2114: 2112:Nomenclature 2111: 2110: 2107: 2104: 2090: 2087: 2084: 2083: 2078: 2075: 2072: 2071: 2067: 2064: 2061: 2060: 2056: 2052: 2049: 2046: 2045: 2041: 2037: 2033: 2029: 2026: 2023: 2022: 2018: 2015: 2012: 2011: 2007: 2004: 2001: 1998: 1997: 1992: 1989: 1986: 1985: 1981: 1978: 1975: 1974: 1971:(7.62×49mm). 1970: 1966: 1963: 1960: 1959: 1955: 1952: 1949: 1948: 1944: 1941: 1938: 1937: 1933: 1930: 1927: 1926: 1922: 1919: 1916: 1915: 1911: 1907: 1904: 1901: 1900: 1896: 1893: 1890: 1889: 1885: 1881: 1878: 1875: 1874: 1870: 1867: 1864: 1863: 1859: 1855: 1851: 1848: 1845: 1844: 1840: 1836: 1833: 1830: 1829: 1825: 1822: 1819: 1818: 1814: 1811: 1808: 1807: 1803: 1800: 1797: 1796: 1792: 1788: 1785: 1782: 1781: 1777: 1774: 1771: 1770: 1766: 1762: 1759: 1756: 1755: 1751: 1747: 1744: 1741: 1740: 1736: 1733: 1730: 1729: 1725: 1722: 1719: 1718: 1714: 1711: 1708: 1707: 1703: 1699: 1696: 1693: 1692: 1688: 1684: 1681: 1678: 1677: 1673: 1670: 1667: 1666: 1662: 1659: 1656: 1655: 1651: 1648: 1645: 1644: 1640: 1637: 1634: 1633: 1629: 1626: 1623: 1622: 1618: 1615: 1612: 1611: 1603: 1601: 1583: 1579: 1570: 1561: 1557: 1555: 1549: 1545: 1541: 1537: 1534: 1530: 1525: 1522: 1516: 1512: 1508: 1506: 1501: 1497: 1493: 1489: 1487: 1483: 1478: 1471:Tanker models 1468: 1464: 1462: 1458: 1454: 1450: 1445: 1440: 1438: 1432: 1430: 1426: 1422: 1418: 1414: 1410: 1406: 1399: 1394: 1386: 1380:Sniper models 1371: 1368: 1360: 1357:February 2022 1350: 1346: 1342: 1336: 1333:This section 1331: 1322: 1321: 1313: 1311: 1306: 1302: 1299: 1297: 1292: 1290: 1286: 1282: 1278: 1269: 1261: 1252: 1250: 1245: 1243: 1239: 1238:rotating bolt 1234: 1224: 1215: 1212: 1206: 1203: 1200:developed an 1199: 1194: 1188: 1184: 1180: 1177: 1173: 1169: 1167: 1158: 1153: 1145: 1138: 1134: 1131:An M1 Garand 1129: 1122: 1117: 1114: 1109: 1106: 1101: 1096: 1093: 1091: 1090:trigger guard 1087: 1082: 1080: 1076: 1072: 1063: 1049: 1047: 1043: 1039: 1036:, almost all 1035: 1031: 1026: 1023: 1021: 1017: 1013: 1009: 1005: 1001: 996: 994: 990: 986: 982: 978: 975:In 1939, the 973: 971: 966: 962: 958: 953: 951: 947: 943: 939: 938:Carcano M1891 935: 934:Karabiner 98k 931: 927: 918: 911: 907: 904: 899: 891: 883: 874: 872: 867: 863: 857: 853: 850: 847: 841: 839: 835: 830: 828: 824: 820: 816: 812: 808: 804: 799: 796: 792: 788: 784: 780: 776: 772: 769: 765: 761: 749: 744: 737: 732: 723: 719: 689: 688: 681: 651: 647: 641: 618:(1948), give 617: 614: 607:Pronunciation 604: 602: 599: 595: 592: 588: 584: 580: 576: 572: 567: 565: 561: 557: 553: 552:service rifle 550:that was the 549: 545: 541: 529: 526: 525: 524: 520: 517: 513: 511: 506: 502: 498: 494: 490: 488: 484: 480: 478: 474: 471: 470:rotating bolt 468: 464: 461: 459: 455: 449: 446: 444: 441: 440: 438: 436: 432: 427: 423: 420: 416: 412: 408: 404: 400: 395: 392: 391: 386: 382: 378: 371: 367: 363: 359: 355: 348: 345: 342: 339: 336: 334: 331: 329: 326: 324: 321: 319: 316: 314: 311: 310: 308: 304: 300: 296: 293: 290: 286: 281: 275: 272: 270: 267: 265: 262: 260: 257: 255: 252: 250: 247: 245: 242: 240: 239:Iran–Iraq War 237: 235: 232: 230: 227: 225: 222: 220: 217: 215: 212: 210: 207: 205: 202: 200: 197: 195: 192: 190: 187: 185: 182: 180: 177: 175: 172: 170: 167: 165: 162: 160: 157: 155: 152: 150: 147: 145: 142: 140: 137: 135: 132: 130: 127: 125: 122: 120: 117: 115: 112: 111: 109: 105: 102: 101: 96: 92: 85: 82: 81: 79: 75: 70: 67:United States 66: 62: 59: 56: 52: 47: 41: 36: 29: 26: 22: 7492:Type 4 rifle 7424: 7276:Machine guns 7146: 7065:World War II 7018: 7005: 6987: 6975: 6963: 6942: 6929: 6917:the original 6911: 6900: 6874: 6865: 6855: 6835: 6828: 6820:the original 6815: 6806: 6782: 6775: 6756: 6724: 6718: 6709:Shotgun News 6707: 6697: 6687: 6680: 6671: 6665: 6654:the original 6632: 6619: 6614: 6608: 6598:December 14, 6596:. Retrieved 6592: 6583: 6560: 6554: 6542: 6533: 6528: 6519: 6509: 6497:. Retrieved 6490:the original 6485: 6457: 6436: 6428: 6420: 6415: 6403:. Retrieved 6401:. p. 18 6398: 6388: 6369: 6363: 6343: 6306: 6300: 6292:the original 6287: 6278: 6273:, p. 4. 6266: 6257: 6248: 6236:. Retrieved 6227: 6218: 6207: 6198: 6186:. Retrieved 6182:the original 6177: 6168: 6156:. Retrieved 6149:the original 6144: 6135: 6123:. Retrieved 6119:the original 6109: 6097:. Retrieved 6092: 6083: 6071:. Retrieved 6066: 6063:"구형 M1·카빈소총" 6056: 6044:. Retrieved 6039: 6029: 6017:. Retrieved 6003: 5993: 5981: 5969:. Retrieved 5962:the original 5943: 5936: 5927:September 3, 5925:, retrieved 5921:the original 5915: 5909: 5899:November 10, 5897:. Retrieved 5892: 5882: 5868: 5854: 5831: 5826: 5814: 5803:the original 5793: 5779: 5770: 5761: 5749:. Retrieved 5745: 5736: 5726:December 31, 5724:. Retrieved 5720:the original 5715: 5706: 5694:. Retrieved 5690:the original 5685: 5675: 5655: 5591:December 14, 5589:. Retrieved 5585: 5575: 5565:December 14, 5563:. Retrieved 5559: 5550: 5541: 5532: 5523: 5513: 5503: 5497: 5489:the original 5484: 5474: 5463: 5442: 5395: 5384: 5376:the original 5371: 5366:Guthrie, J. 5361: 5353:the original 5348: 5338: 5330: 5326: 5322: 5316: 5307: 5297: 5286: 5280: 5260: 5253: 5241:. Retrieved 5237:the original 5232: 5223: 5215:the original 5205: 5193: 5174: 5149: 5137:. Retrieved 5132: 5123: 5095: 5089: 5062:November 15, 5060:. Retrieved 5056:the original 5051: 5046:Ewing, Mel. 5041: 5032: 4998: 4991: 4980: 4971: 4948: 4942: 4930:. Retrieved 4926:the original 4921: 4912: 4893: 4887: 4873:cite journal 4864: 4858: 4835: 4807: 4779: 4759: 4747:. Retrieved 4742: 4716:. Retrieved 4709:the original 4704: 4692: 4681: 4675: 4652: 4646: 4634:. Retrieved 4630:the original 4625: 4616: 4606:November 15, 4604:. Retrieved 4600:the original 4595: 4569: 4547:. Retrieved 4543:the original 4539:WorldGuns.ru 4538: 4511: 4502: 4493: 4467: 4436:cite journal 4425: 4406: 4400: 4381: 4375: 4354: 4346: 4337: 4331: 4319:. Retrieved 4315: 4306: 4297: 4269: 4251: 4232: 4231:Fitzsimons, 4227: 4208: 4165: 4158: 4146:. Retrieved 4141: 4131: 4119:. Retrieved 4114: 4105: 4095: 4091: 4087: 4083: 4079: 4077: 4063: 4054: 4042:. Retrieved 4036: 4026: 4014:. Retrieved 4010: 4000: 3981: 3960:. Retrieved 3954: 3945: 3926: 3920: 3908: 3896:. Retrieved 3883: 3863: 3856: 3845:the original 3840: 3827: 3804: 3795: 3770: 3762: 3743: 3737: 3720: 3713: 3694: 3688: 3669: 3663: 3654: 3646: 3622: 3615: 3596: 3575: 3566: 3551: 3544: 3540: 3536: 3531: 3504: 3451: 3304:Saudi Arabia 3230: 3222: 3137: 3054:West Germany 3040: 3037:World War II 3012: 2719:Armed Forces 2477: 2473: 2464: 2426: 2399:Civilian use 2390: 2355:Designed by 2354: 2311: 2274: 2271:Beretta BM59 2257:World War II 2245: 2228: 2225:Type 4 Rifle 2222: 2200: 2193: 2120:Description 2101: 2035: 1619:Description 1575: 1558: 1550: 1546: 1542: 1538: 1526: 1517: 1513: 1509: 1502: 1498: 1494: 1490: 1476: 1474: 1465: 1441: 1433: 1421:sniper rifle 1412: 1408: 1402: 1363: 1354: 1341:spinning off 1334: 1309: 1307: 1303: 1300: 1293: 1274: 1246: 1232: 1229: 1207: 1201: 1189: 1185: 1181: 1165: 1162: 1156: 1132: 1120: 1113:World War II 1110: 1097: 1094: 1086:safety catch 1083: 1075:gas-operated 1068: 1027: 1024: 1012:Army Reserve 997: 977:British Army 974: 954: 923: 858: 854: 842: 836:, Pedersen, 831: 823:Marine Corps 800: 775:Fort Benning 758: 747: 735: 685: 645: 615: 610: 568: 560:World War II 543: 539: 537: 509: 463:Gas-operated 421: length 387: 306:Manufacturer 259:The Troubles 209:Football War 154:Algerian War 114:World War II 98: 94:Used by 25: 7427:derivatives 7373:.30 carbine 7368:.38 Special 7305:M2 Browning 6238:October 12, 6099:November 8, 6073:November 8, 6069:(in Korean) 6046:November 8, 6042:(in Korean) 6019:November 8, 5895:(in Korean) 4094:instead of 4082:hard as in 4044:December 3, 4016:December 3, 3221:: known as 3219:Netherlands 3152:Ivory Coast 2981:El Salvador 2804:Afghanistan 2776:units, and 2715:South Korea 2597:Philippines 2323:that fires 2027:Mk 2 Mod 1 1854:John Garand 1834:Mk 2 Mod 0 1453:Vietnam War 1255:Accessories 1240:inside the 1198:John Garand 1193:Lee–Enfield 1071:.30 caliber 1048:of Norway. 1000:Vietnam War 946:Axis forces 877:Service use 838:Rheinmetall 755:Development 591:bolt-action 579:John Garand 376: built 204:Six-Day War 184:Vietnam War 159:Suez Crisis 48:, Stockholm 7512:Categories 7335:Cartridges 7278:and larger 7246:Ithaca M37 7152:M1 carbine 6499:October 5, 6178:Imageshack 5819:Smith 1969 5422:, enacted 5414:, 36  4749:October 3, 4718:October 3, 4636:October 3, 4549:October 3, 4321:October 3, 3588:References 3508:1936-1958 3336:Lend-Lease 3235:Dutch Navy 3227:Dutch Army 2882:magazines. 2746:Korean War 2723:Korean War 2333:ammunition 2296:" series. 1987:PWB rifle 1860:magazines 1689:and mount 1630:Prototype 1503:The M1E5 " 1437:Korean War 1345:relocating 1289:M5 bayonet 1249:parkerized 1218:Gas system 1100:iron sight 1018:, and the 932:(e.g. the 912:, Kentucky 906:half-track 871:Winchester 771:Model 1919 577:designer, 564:Korean War 346:(civilian) 318:Winchester 129:Korean War 7482:Ruger XGI 7425:M1 Garand 7310:Lewis gun 7290:M1918 BAR 7147:M1 Garand 6188:April 28, 6125:April 28, 6014:0190-8286 5139:April 16, 4932:March 29, 4739:"FM 23-5" 4062:(1983) . 3962:April 28, 3514:M14 rifle 3462:Gewehr 43 3362:Venezuela 3249:Nicaragua 3086:Indonesia 2898:M1 rifles 2836:Argentina 2373:M14 rifle 2337:M14 rifle 2314:M14 rifle 2308:M14 rifle 2300:M14 rifle 2057:magazine 2006:Remington 1969:cartridge 1910:Remington 1757:M1E8/M1D 1742:M1E7/M1C 1457:U.S. Navy 1447:modified 1425:U.S. Army 1176:cartridge 1084:The M1's 910:Fort Knox 866:M16 rifle 827:.256 Bang 601:M14 rifle 556:U.S. Army 540:M1 Garand 435:Cartridge 379:5,468,772 368:1934–1957 7358:.380 ACP 7343:12 Gauge 7233:Shotguns 7205:Grenades 7129:carbines 7077:Sidearms 6232:Archived 6145:Newsweek 5971:June 27, 5787:(2015). 5696:June 11, 5686:CITEMAR6 5601:cite web 5443:Fox News 5098:: 81–85. 4233:op. cit. 3803:(1997). 3605:Archived 3474:SNL B-21 3456:See also 3318:Thailand 3290:Paraguay 3263:Pakistan 3068:Honduras 2995:Ethiopia 2894:Cambodia 2237:magazine 1939:T22E3HB 1891:T20E2HB 1791:Ljungman 1521:6th Army 1316:Variants 1277:bayonets 1242:receiver 1233:gas-trap 1057:Features 803:infantry 787:Pedersen 783:Thompson 779:Berthier 562:and the 544:M1 rifle 507:8-round 390:Variants 384:Variants 365:Produced 340:F.M.A.P. 298:Designed 288:Designer 269:Iraq War 254:Gulf War 7497:USMCDMR 7383:.50 BMG 7363:.45 ACP 7353:.32 ACP 7315:Bazooka 7180:M2 Hyde 6626:. 1955. 6152:(Photo) 5889:"M1 소총" 5401:Pub. 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Index

Garand (disambiguation)

Swedish Army Museum
Semi-automatic rifle
Users
World War II
Chinese Civil War
Indonesian National Revolution
Korean War
1948 Arab–Israeli War
Hukbalahap Rebellion
Indo-Pakistani Wars
First Indochina War
Algerian War
Suez Crisis
Second Taiwan Strait Crisis
1958 Lebanon crisis
Cuban Revolution
Bay of Pigs Invasion
Vietnam War
Laotian Civil War
1964 Ethiopian–Somali Border War
Dominican Civil War
Six-Day War
Football War
Cambodian Civil War
Black September
Sandinista Revolution
Angolan Civil War
Lebanese Civil War

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