Dick Hosmer
KCA Official Member
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 Collector of Springfield Arms, 1865-1915
Posts: 1862 Location: Northern California Joined: Nov 20 th, 2005 Gender:
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Re: Serial numbers 1898 Carbine vs Rifle
Reply #9 - Mar 24th, 2013 at 6:01pm
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Sorry, but that is an absolutely impossible question.
Facts:
(1) Some 5000+ 1898C stocks were put on the surplus market (available to Bannerman, and Bubba) around 1900, when the arms were recalled and restocked en masse. No one knows their path through life, but they are scarce today. It is impossible to tell, even within the known range, which receiver was on a carbine and which was on a rifle, once reduced to the "parts" level. Later carbines were marked "Model 1899" so there is no mystery with them.
(2) The arm has a rifle sight (never applied to a carbine officially)
(3) Am giving you the benefit of the doubt on the barrel and front sight - it may be genuine carbine, it may not.
(4) Absolutely no one was faking Krag carbines in 1957, so, you got a "fair shake". It is only recently that original 98Cs (112000-135000) have become valuable, but they are also shunned by many collectors for the very reason this question came up - they can easily be faked, though such arms are normally found in M99 (32") stocks.
In short, am afraid my best guess would be Bubba, though, as I stated earlier, not with malice aforethought. He wanted a deer rifle too!
You do not have a proper M1898 Carbine, but, you are still way ahead of the game - 56 years of pleasure, and parts worth 50 times what you paid for them. Enjoy!!
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