Inland M1 Carbine Serial Numbers

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Carbine, Caliber .30, M1
Type
  • M1, Semi-automaticcarbine
  • M2/M3, Selective-firecarbine
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1942–1973 (United States)
Used bySee Users
WarsWorld War II
Hukbalahap Rebellion
Chinese Civil War (limited)
First Indochina War
Korean War
Malayan Emergency
Algerian War
Suez Crisis
Cuban Revolution
Vietnam War
Laotian Civil War
Bay of Pigs Invasion[1]
Six-Day War
Cambodian Civil War
The Troubles
Angolan Civil War
Black September[2]
Lebanese Civil War
Mexican Drug War
Production history
DesignerFrederick L. Humeston
William C. Roemer
David Marshall Williams
Designed1938–1941
ManufacturerMilitary contractors
Commercial copies
Unit cost$45 (WW2)
ProducedNovember 1941–August 1945 (U.S. Military)
1945–present (Commercial)
No. built6,121,309 (WWII)[3]
VariantsM1A1, M1A3, M2, M2A2, M3
Specifications
Mass5.2 lb (2.4 kg) empty5.8 lb (2.6 kg) loaded w/ sling
Length35.6 in (900 mm)
Barrel length18 in (460 mm)
Cartridge.30 Carbine (7.62×33mm)
ActionGas-operated (short-stroke piston), rotating bolt
Rate of fireSemi-automatic (M1/A1)
750 rounds/min (M2)[4]
Muzzle velocity1,990 ft/s (607 m/s)
Effective firing range300 yd (270 m)
Feed system15- or 30-round detachable box magazine
SightsRear sight: aperture; L-type flip or adjustable, front sight: wing-protected post

The m1 carbines based on a serial number production rock-ola m1 garand born on the m1 carbine his grills. To this 1956 example in excellent condition inland low serial number, 250, you can someone tell me, date start, 888, including. The following books are highly recommended reading on the M1 carbine:- Bruce N. Canfield - Complete Guide to the M1 Garand and the M1 carbine - ISBN 0-917218-83-3 Larry L Ruth - War Baby! The serial number was placed on the carbine receiver during the manufacturing process of the receiver, not when the carbine was finally assembled. The decision for which receivers would be used for the U.S. Carbine Models M1, M1A1, or M2 were made well after the receiver was completed as all of these models used the same receiver.

The M1 carbine (formally the United States Carbine, Caliber .30, M1) is a lightweight, easy to use,[5].30 carbine (7.62x33 mm) semi-automaticcarbine that was a standard firearm for the U.S. military during World War II, the Korean War and well into the Vietnam War. The M1 carbine was produced in several variants and was widely used by not only the U.S. military, but by paramilitary and police forces around the world. It has also been a popular civilian firearm.

The M2 carbine is the selective-fire version of the M1 carbine capable of firing in both semi-automatic and full-automatic. The M3 carbine was an M2 carbine with an active infraredscope system.[6]

Despite having a similar name and appearance, the M1 Carbine is not a carbine version of the M1 Garand rifle. They are different firearms, and they use different ammunition. On July 1, 1925, the U.S. Army began using the current naming system where the 'M' is the designation for Model and the 'number' represents the sequential development of equipment and weapons.[7] Therefore, the 'M1 rifle' was the first rifle developed under this system. The 'M1 carbine' was the first carbine developed under this system. The 'M2 carbine' was the second carbine developed under the system, etc.

  • 1Development history
  • 2Features
  • 4U.S. combat use
    • 4.1World War II
  • 5Foreign usage
  • 6Users
  • 7Variants
  • 8Derivatives
  • 10Commercial copies
  • 12Related equipment and accessories

Development history[edit]

Limitations of weapons in the U.S. arsenal[edit]

The M1 Rifle and M1 Carbine share only a buttplate screw and use different sized .30 caliber ammunition
Briefing for staff personnel. Note: Folding stock M1A1 carbine on the table
81 mm mortar crew in action at Camp Carson, Colorado, April 24, 1943. The soldier on the left has a slung M1 Carbine.
A U.S. anti-tank crew in combat in the Netherlands, November 4, 1944. The soldier on the far right is holding an M1 Carbine

Prior to World War II, U.S. Army Ordnance received reports that the full-size M1 rifle was too heavy and cumbersome for most support troops (staff, mortarmen, radiomen, etc.) to carry. During prewar and early war field exercises, it was found that the M1 Garand impeded these soldiers' mobility, as a slung rifle would frequently catch on brush, bang the helmet, or tilt over the eyes. Many soldiers found the rifle slid off the shoulder unless slung diagonally across the back, where it prevented the wearing of standard field packs and haversacks.

Additionally, Germany's use of glider-borne and paratroop forces to launch surprise ‘blitzkrieg’ attacks behind the front lines generated a request for a new compact infantry weapon to equip support troops.[8][9] This request called for a compact, lightweight defensive weapon with greater range, accuracy and firepower than handguns, while weighing half as much as the Thompson submachine gun or the M1 rifle.[8] The U.S. Army decided that a carbine would adequately fulfill all of these requirements, but specified that the new arm should weigh no more than five pounds and have an effective range of 300 yards.[10][11] Paratroopers were also added to the list of intended users and a folding-stock version would also be developed.

Designing the M1 carbine[edit]

In 1938, the Chief of Infantry requested that the Ordnance Department develop a 'light rifle' or carbine, though the formal requirement for the weapon type was not approved until 1940. This led to a competition in 1941 by major U.S. firearm companies and designers.

Winchester at first did not submit a carbine design, as it was occupied in developing the .30-06 Winchester M2 Military Rifle. The rifle originated as a design by Jonathan 'Ed' Browning, brother of the famous firearm designer John Browning. A couple of months after Ed Browning's death in May 1939, Winchester hired David Marshall 'Carbine' Williams who had begun work on a short-stroke gas piston design while serving a prison sentence at a North Carolina minimum-security work farm. Winchester, after Williams' release, had hired Williams on the strength of recommendations of firearms industry leaders and hoped Williams would be able to complete various designs left unfinished by Ed Browning, including the Winchester .30-06 M2 rifle. Williams incorporated his short-stroke piston in the existing design. After the Marine Corps semi-automatic rifle trials in 1940, Browning's rear-locking tilting bolt design proved unreliable in sandy conditions. As a result, the rifle was redesigned to incorporate a Garand-style rotating bolt and operating rod, retaining Williams' short-stroke piston. By May 1941, Williams had shaved the M2 rifle prototype from about 9.5 lb (4.3 kg) to a mere 7.5 lb (3.4 kg).

Ordnance found unsatisfactory the first series of prototype carbines submitted by several firearms companies and some independent designers.[12] Winchester had contacted the Ordnance Corps to examine their rifle M2 design. Major René Studler of Ordnance believed the rifle design could be scaled down to a carbine which would weigh 4.5 to 4.75 lb (2.0–2.2 kg) and demanded a prototype as soon as possible. The first model was developed at Winchester in 13 days by William C. Roemer, Fred Humeston and three other Winchester engineers under supervision of Edwin Pugsley, and was essentially Williams' last version of the .30-06 M2 scaled down to the .30 SL cartridge.[13] This patchwork prototype was cobbled together using the trigger housing and lockwork of a Winchester M1905 rifle and a modified Garand operating rod. The prototype was an immediate hit with army observers.[14]

After the initial army testing in August 1941, the Winchester design team set out to develop a more refined version. Williams participated in the finishing of this prototype. The second prototype competed successfully against all remaining carbine candidates in September 1941, and Winchester was notified of their success the very next month. Standardization as the M1 Carbine was approved on October 22, 1941. This story was the loose basis for the 1952 movie Carbine Williams starring James Stewart. Contrary to the movie, Williams had little to do with the carbine's development, with the exception of his short-stroke gas piston design. Williams worked on his own design apart from the other Winchester staff, but it was not ready for testing until December 1941, two months after the Winchester M1 Carbine had been adopted and type-classified. Winchester supervisor Edwin Pugsley conceded that Williams' final design was 'an advance on the one that was accepted', but noted that Williams' decision to go it alone was a distinct impediment to the project,[13] and Williams' additional design features were not incorporated into M1 production. In a 1951 memo written in fear of a patent infringement lawsuit by Williams, Winchester noted his patent for the short-stroke piston may have been improperly granted as a previous patent covering the same principle of operation was overlooked by the patent office.[13]

In 1973 the senior technical editor at the NRA contacted Edwin Pugsley for 'a technical last testament' on M1 carbine history shortly before his death 19 Nov 1975. According to Pugsley, 'The carbine was invented by no single man,' but was the result of a team effort including Bill Roemer, Marsh Williams, Fred Humeston, Cliff Warner, at least three other Winchester engineers, and Pugsley himself. Ideas were taken and modified from the Winchester M2 Browning rifle (Williams' gas system), the Winchester 1905 rifle (fire control group), M1 Garand (buttstock dimensions and bolt and operating slide principles), and a percussion shotgun in Pugsley's collection (hook breech and barrel band assembly/disassembly).[15]

Features[edit]

WW II M1 Carbine with a magazine pouch mounted on the stock that held two spare 15-round magazines
Closeup of M1 carbine receiver. Note: original flip sight and push button safety.
Comparison of M1 Carbine magazines. Original 15-round magazine on left and 30-round on right.
U.S. Army Rangers resting in the vicinity of Pointe du Hoc, which they assaulted in support of 'Omaha' Beach landings on 'D-Day', 6 June 1944. Note Ranger in right center, apparently using his middle finger to push cartridges into a M-1 carbine magazine. The carbine and a backpack frame are nearby.
Paratrooper armed with a folding stock M1A1 carbine, fires a bazooka at an enemy pillbox on Greary Point, Corregidor.
A Marine armed with an M1 Carbine and M8 grenade launcher attached to the muzzle, during the Battle of Iwo Jima.

Ammunition[edit]

The .30 Carbine cartridge is essentially a rimless version of the then obsolete .32 Winchester Self-Loading cartridge introduced for the Winchester Model 1905 rifle.[16] The propellant was much newer, though, taking advantage of chemistry advances. As a result, the .30 Carbine is approximately 27% more powerful than its parent cartridge. A standard .30 Carbine ball bullet weighs 110 grains (7.1 g), a complete loaded round weighs 195 grains (12.6 g) and has a muzzle velocity of 1,990 ft/s (610 m/s) giving it 967 ft·lbf (1,311 joules) of energy, when fired from the M1 carbine's 18' barrel.

By comparison, the .30-06M1 Garand is almost 3 times more powerful than the Carbine. However, the Carbine is twice as powerful as the .45ACP caliber submachine guns in common use at the time. As a result, the carbine offers much better range, accuracy and penetration than those submachine guns.[8] The M1 is also half the weight of a Thompson submachine gun and fires a lighter cartridge. Therefore, soldiers armed with the Carbine can carry much more ammunition than those armed with a Tommy Gun.

Categorizing the M1 carbine series has been the subject of much debate. Although commonly compared to the later German StG44 and Russian AK-47, the M1 and M2 carbines are under-powered and outclassed by comparison.[17] The Carbine instead falls somewhere between the submachine gun and the assault rifle, and could be called a precursor of the personal defense weapon since it fulfilled a similar role.

One characteristic of .30 Carbine ammunition is that from the beginning of production, non-corrosive primers were specified. This was the first major use of this type of primer in a military firearm. Because the rifle had a closed gas system, not normally disassembled, corrosive primers would have led to a rapid deterioration of the gas system.[18] The use of non-corrosive primers was a novelty in service ammunition at this time.[19] Some failures to fire were reported in early lots of .30 Carbine ammunition, attributed to moisture ingress of the non-corrosive primer compound.[20]

Sights, range & accuracy[edit]

The M1 carbine entered service with a simple flip sight, which had two settings: 150 and 300 yards.[21] However, field reports indicated that this sight was inadequate, and in 1944, it was replaced by a sliding ramp-type adjustable sight with four settings: 100, 200, 250 and 300 yards.[22] This new rear sight was also adjustable for windage.

At 100 yards (91 m), the M1 carbine can deliver groups between 3 and 5 inches, sufficient for its intended purpose as a close-range defensive weapon. The M1 carbine has a maximum effective range of 300 yards (270 m). However, bullet drop is significant past 200 yards (180 m).[16] Therefore, the M1 has a practical effective range of about 200 yards.[23]

Magazines[edit]

The M1 carbine entered service with a standard straight 15-round box magazine. The introduction of the select-fire M2 carbine in October 1944[24] also brought into service the curved 30-round magazine or 'Banana Clip'.[25] After WW2, the 30-round magazine quickly became the standard magazine for both the M1 and M2 carbines, although the 15-round magazine remained in service until the end of the Vietnam war.[26]

Perhaps the most common accessory used on the M1 carbine was a standard magazine belt pouch that was mounted to the right side of the stock and held two extra 15-round magazines. This field adaptation was never officially approved, but proved an efficient method to supply extra ammunition in combat. After the introduction of the 30-round magazine, it was common for troops to tape two 30-round magazines together, a practice that became known as 'Jungle style'. This led the military to introduce the 'Holder, Magazine T3-A1' also called the 'Jungle Clip', a metal clamp that held two magazines together without the need for tape.

Inland m1 carbine serial number range

The 30-round magazines introduced for use with the selective-fire M2 Carbine would not be reliably retained by the magazine catch made for the original M1 Carbine which was designed to retain a 15-round magazine, so the much heavier (when loaded) 30-round magazine would not be properly seated in the M1 Carbine magazine well. The loaded 30-round magazine would typically cant (impairing feed reliability) or even fall out, which helps explain why the 30-round magazines have a poor reliability record (they are also more prone to damage due to their added length and weight when loaded as thin steel is used to make them). Thus early production M1 Carbines must be fitted with the type IV magazine catch used on the M2 Carbine (and late production M1 Carbines) if it is to be used with 30-round magazines. The type IV magazine catch will have a leg on the left side to correspond with the additional nub on the 30-round magazines.[27]

Initial combat reports noted that M1 carbine's magazine release button was often mistaken for the safety button while under fire.[22] When this occurred, pressing the mag release caused the loaded magazine to drop into the dirt, while the safety remained in the off position. As a result, the push-button safety was redesigned using a rotating lever.[22][28]

Accessories[edit]

Originally the M1 carbine did not have a bayonet lug, but it was often issued with an M3 fighting knife. Due to requests from the field, the carbine was modified to incorporate a bayonet lug attached to the barrel band starting in 1945.[29] However, very few carbines with bayonet lugs reached the front lines before the end of World War II. After the war, the bayonet lug was added to many M1 Carbines during the arsenal refurbishing process. By the start of the Korean War, the bayonet lug-equipped M1 was standard issue. It is now rare to find an original M1 carbine without the bayonet lug. The M1 carbine mounts the standard M4 bayonet, which was based on the earlier M3 fighting knife and formed the basis for the later M5, M6 and M7 bayonet-knives.

A folding-stock version of the carbine (the M1A1) was also developed after a request for a compact and light infantry arm for airborne troops. The Inland Division of General Motors manufactured 140,000 of them in two product runs in late 1942.[24] They were originally issued to the 82nd and 101st Airborne divisions but were later issued to all army airborne units and the US Marine Corps.[24] The folding-stock M1A1 is an unusual design in that the stock is not locked in the open or closed position, but is instead held in place by a spring-loaded cam.

As carbines were reconditioned, parts such as the magazine catch, rear sight, barrel band without bayonet lug, and stock were upgraded with current standard-issue parts. Also, both during and after WW2, many semi-automatic M1 carbines were converted to select-fire M2 carbines by using the T17 and T18 conversion kits.[30] The conversion included a modified sear, slide, and trigger housing, and added a disconnector, disconnector lever, and selector switch that could be set for semi-auto or full-automatic fire.

During World War II, the T23 (M3) flash hider was designed to reduce the muzzle flash from the carbine, but was not introduced into service until the advent of the M3 carbine.[31] With the exception of T23 hiders mounted on M3 carbines, few if any T23 flash-hider attachments saw service during the war, though unit armorers occasionally hand-built improvised compensator/flash-hiders of their own design.[31][32]

The M1 carbine was used with the M8 grenade launcher, which was developed in early 1944. It was fired with the .30 Carbine M6 Grenade Blank cartridge to launch 22 mm rifle grenades. Stress from firing rifle grenades would eventually crack the carbine's stock. It also could not use the M8 launcher with an M7 auxiliary 'booster' charge (to extend its range) without breaking the stock. This made it a type of emergency-issue weapon.

Production[edit]

American infantrymen of the 290th Regiment fight in fresh snowfall near Amonines, Belgium. Soldier in foreground is armed with an M1 carbine.

A total of over 6.1 million M1 carbines of various models was manufactured, making it the most produced small arm for the American military during World War II (compared with about 5.4 million M1 rifles and about 1.3 million Thompson submachine guns). Despite being designed by Winchester, the great majority of these were made by other companies (see § Military contractors below). The largest producer was the Inland division of General Motors, but many others were made by contractors as diverse as IBM, the Underwood typewriter company, and the Rock-Olajukebox company. Few contractors made all the parts for carbines bearing their names: some makers bought parts from other major contractors or sub-contracted minor parts to companies like Marlin Firearms or Auto-Ordnance. Parts by all makers were required to be interchangeable. Often one company would get ahead or behind in production and parts would be shipped from one company to the other to help them catch up on their quota. When receivers were shipped for this purpose the manufacturers would often mark them for both companies. One of the stranger combinations were the M1's made by the combined efforts of Underwood and Quality Hardware, resulting in the manufacturer mark UN-QUALITY.[33] The receiver was subcontracted from Union Switch and Signal, not Underwood. Many carbines were refurbished at several arsenals after the war, with many parts interchanged from original maker carbines. True untouched war production carbines, therefore, are the most desirable for collectors.[34]

The M1 carbine was also one of the most cost effective weapons used by the United States Military during World War II. At the beginning of World War II the average production cost for an M1 carbine was approximately $45, about half the cost of an M1 rifle at approximately $85 and about a fifth of the cost of a Thompson submachine gun at approximately $225. The .30 Carbine ammunition was also far cheaper to produce than the standard .30-06 ammunition; used fewer resources, was smaller, lighter, faster and easier to make. These were major factors in the United States Military decision to adopt the M1 carbine, especially when considering the vast numbers of weapons and ammunition manufactured and transported by the United States during World War II.

U.S. combat use[edit]

World War II[edit]

U.S. Marine in combat at Guam.
M1 Carbine at First Iwo Jima Flag Raising

The M1 carbine with its reduced-power .30 cartridge was not originally intended to serve as a primary weapon for combat infantrymen, nor was it comparable to more powerful assault rifles developed late in the war. However, it was markedly superior to the .45-caliber submachineguns in use at the time in both accuracy and penetration,[8] and its lighter .30 cartridge allowed soldiers to carry more ammunition. As a result, the carbine was soon widely issued to infantry officers, American paratroopers,[35] NCOs, ammunition bearers, forward artillery observers, and other frontline troops.[36] The first M1 carbines were delivered in mid-1942, with initial priority given to troops in the European Theater of Operations (ETO).[8]

During WWII a standard U.S. Army Infantry Company was issued a total of 28 M1 carbines.[37] Company headquarters was issued 9 carbines, Weapons platoon was issued 16 carbines and the three Rifle platoons were issued 1 each.[37] Although, as the war progressed these numbers would vary greatly, as individual units/soldiers would often arm themselves as they saw fit.

The M1 carbine gained generally high praise for its small size, light weight and firepower, especially by those troops who were unable to use a full-size rifle as their primary weapon.[38][39] However, its reputation in front-line combat was mixed and negative reports began to surface with airborne operations in Sicily in 1943,[40] and increased during the fall and winter of 1944.[41]

In the Pacific theater, soldiers and guerrilla forces operating in heavy jungle with only occasional enemy contact praised the carbine for its small size, light weight, and firepower.[42] However, soldiers and Marines engaged in frequent daily firefights (particularly those serving in the Philippines) found the weapon to have insufficient penetration and stopping power.[43][44] While carbine bullets would easily penetrate the front and back of steel helmets, as well as the body armor used by Japanese forces of the era,[45][46] reports of the carbine's failure to stop enemy soldiers, sometimes after multiple hits, appeared in individual after-action reports, postwar evaluations, and service histories of both the U.S. Army and the U.S. Marine Corps.[43][47]

The carbine's exclusive use of non-corrosive-primer ammunition was found to be a godsend by troops and ordnance personnel serving in the Pacific, where barrel corrosion was a significant issue with the corrosive primers used in .30-06 caliber weapons.[43] However, in the ETO some soldiers reported misfires attributed to moisture ingress of the non-corrosive primer compound.[20]

Selective-fire version[edit]

U.S. Marines fighting in the streets of Seoul, Korea. September 20, 1950. The M1 in the foreground has the bayonet mounted.

Initially, the M1 carbine was intended to have a select-fire capability, but the requirement for rapid production of the new carbine resulted in the omission of this feature from the Light Rifle Program. On 26 October 1944, in response to the Germans' widespread use of automatic weapons, especially the Sturmgewehr 44assault rifle, the select-fire M2 carbine was introduced, along with a new 30-round magazine. The M2 had a fully automatic rate-of-fire of about 850–900 rounds-per-minute. Although actual M2 production began late in the war (April 1945), US Ordnance issued conversion-part kits to allow field conversion of semi-auto M1 carbines to the selective-fire M2 configuration. These converted M1/M2 select-fire carbines saw limited combat service in Europe, primarily during the final Allied advance into Germany. In the Pacific, both converted and original M2 carbines saw limited use in the last days of the fighting in the Philippines.[32]

Infrared sight versions[edit]

The M3 carbine was an M2 carbine with the M2 infrared night sight or sniperscope.[6] The M3 did not have iron sights.[6] It was first used in combat by Army units during the invasion of Okinawa, about 150 M3 were used on Okinawa. For the first time, U.S. soldiers had a weapon that allowed them to visually detect Japanese infiltrating into American lines at night, even during complete darkness. A team of two or three soldiers was used to operate the weapon and provide support.[48] At night, the scope would be used to detect Japanese patrols and assault units moving forward. At that point, the operator would fire a burst of automatic fire at the greenish images of enemy soldiers.[48] The M3 carbine had an effective range of about 70 yards (64 meters), limited by the visual capabilities of the sight.[49] Fog and rain further reduced the weapon's effective range.[48][49] However, it is estimated that fully 30% of Japanese casualties inflicted by rifle and carbine fire during the Okinawan campaign were caused by the M3 carbine.[48]

The system was refined over time, and by the Korean War the improved M3 infrared night sight was in service. The M3 sight has a longer effective range than its predecessor, about 125 yards (114 meters). However, it still required the user to carry a heavy backpack-mounted battery pack to power the scope and infrared light. They were used primarily in static defensive positions in Korea to locate troops attempting to infiltrate in darkness. M3 operators would not only use their carbines to dispatch individual targets, but also used tracer ammo to identify troop concentrations for machine gunners to decimate.[50] In total, about 20,000 sets were made before they became obsolete, and were surplussed to the public.

Korean War[edit]

M1 carbine in action during Korean War. Note: 30-round magazine, stock pouch for two 15-round Magazine and grenade launcher. Note the captured Soviet DP-27 machine gun.
U.S. Marines holding captured Chinese Communists during fighting on the central Korean front. Note: M1 carbine with mounted bayonet

By the Korean War, the select fire M2 carbine had largely replaced the submachine-gun in U.S. service[51] and was the most widely used Carbine variant.[52][53] Although, the semi-auto M1 carbine was also widely used- especially by support troops. However, in Korea, all versions of the carbine soon acquired a widespread reputation for jamming in extreme cold weather,[54][55][56] this being eventually traced to weak return springs, freezing of parts due to overly viscous lubricants and inadequate cartridge recoil impulse as the result of subzero temperatures.[57][58]

There were also many complaints from individual soldiers that the carbine bullet failed to stop heavily clothed[59][60][61][62] or gear-laden[63][64][65] North Korean and Chinese (PVA) troops even at close range and after multiple hits.[55][57][66] Marines of the 1st Marine Division also reported instances of carbine bullets failing to stop enemy soldiers, and some units issued standing orders for carbine users to aim for the head.[67][68] PVA infantry forces who had been issued captured U.S. small arms disliked the carbine for the same reason.[69]

A 1951 official U.S. Army evaluation reported that ..'There are practically no data bearing on the accuracy of the carbine at ranges in excess of 50 yards. The record contains a few examples of carbine-aimed fire felling an enemy soldier at this distance or perhaps a little more. But they are so few in number that no general conclusion can be drawn from them. Where carbine fire had proved killing effect, approximately 95 percent of the time the target was dropped at less than 50 yards.'[70] The evaluation also reported that ..'Commanders noted that it took two to three engagements at least to settle their men to the automatic feature of the carbine so that they would not greatly waste ammunition under the first impulse of engagement. By experience, they would come to handle it semiautomatically, but it took prolonged battle hardening to bring about this adjustment in the human equation.'[70]

Despite its mixed reputation, the M2 carbine's firepower often made it the weapon of choice, when it came to night patrols in Korea.[70][50] And, troops would often tape two or three 30 round magazines together to speed up the process of reloading (a practice commonly called 'Jungle Style') .[50] The M3 carbine with its infrared sniperscope was also used against night infiltrators, especially during the static stages of the conflict.

Vietnam War[edit]

ARVN soldiers with M1 carbines and U.S. Special Forces with M16s

The M1 and M2 carbines were again issued to U.S. forces during the Vietnam War, particularly with United States Air Force Security Police and United States Army Special Forces. These weapons began to be replaced by the M16 in 1964, and they were generally out of service by 1970s, although they were used in limited numbers by U.S. troops and security personnel until the fall of Saigon in 1975.

At least 793,994 M1 and M2 carbines were given to the South Vietnamese and were widely used throughout the Vietnam War.[71] A number were captured during the war by Vietcong[72] with some made compact by shortening the barrel and/or stock.[73] 'While the carbine's lighter weight and high rate of fire made it an excellent weapon for small-statured Asians, these guns lacked sufficient hitting power and penetration, and they were eventually outclassed by the AK-47 assault rifle.'[17]

The M1/M2/M3 carbines were the most heavily produced family of U.S. military weapons for several decades. They were used by every branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Foreign usage[edit]

Winston Churchill fires an American M1 carbine during a visit to the US 2nd Armoured Division on Salisbury Plain, 23 March 1944.
British officers: Brigadier 'Mad' Mike Calvert (left) gives orders to Lieutenant-Colonel Shaw, while Major James Lumley stands with M1 carbine under his arm, after the capture of Mogaung in Burma during the second Chindit expedition, June 1944.

After World War II, the M1 and M2 carbines were widely exported to U.S. allies and client states (1,015,568 to South Korea, 793,994 to South Vietnam, 269,644 to France, etc.),[71] they were used as a frontline weapon well into the Vietnam War era, and they continue to be used by military, police, and security forces around the world to this day.

British Army[edit]

During World War II, the British SAS used the M1 and M1A1 carbines after 1943. The weapon was taken into use simply because a decision had been taken by Allied authorities to supply .30 caliber weapons from US stocks in the weapons containers dropped to Resistance groups sponsored by an SOE, or later also Office of Strategic Services (OSS), organizer, on the assumption the groups so supplied would be operating in areas within the operational boundaries of U.S. forces committed to Operation Overlord.[citation needed] They were found to be suited to the kind of operation the two British, two French, and one Belgian Regiment carried out. It was handy enough to parachute with, and, in addition, could be easily stowed in an operational Jeep. Other specialist intelligence collection units, such as 30 Assault Unit sponsored by the Naval Intelligence Division of the British Admiralty, which operated across the entire Allied area of operations, also made use of this weapon.[citation needed]. The Carbine continued to be utilized as late as the Malayan Emergency, by the Police Field Force[74] of the Royal Malaysian Police, along with other units of the British Army,[75][76] were issued the M2 Carbine for both jungle patrols and outpost defense. The Royal Ulster Constabulary also used the M1 carbine.[77]

German Army[edit]

Small numbers of captured M1 carbines were used by German forces in World War II, particularly after D-Day.[78] The German designation for captured carbines was Selbstladekarabiner 455(a). The '(a)' came from the country name in German; in this case, Amerika. It was also used by German police and border guards in Bavaria after World War II and into the 1950s. The carbines were stamped according to the branch they were in service with; for instance, those used by the border guard were stamped 'Bundesgrenzschutz'. Some of these weapons were modified with different sights, finishes, and sometimes new barrels.

Japanese GSDF[edit]

A variant was produced shortly after World War II by the Japanese manufacturer Howa Machinery, under U.S. supervision. These were issued to all branches of the Japan Self-Defense Forces, and large numbers of them found their way to Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War. Howa also made replacement parts for US-made M1 carbines issued to Japanese police and military.

Israel Defense Forces[edit]

The M1 carbine was also used by the Israeli Palmach-based special forces in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. And, because of their compact size and semi-auto capabilities, they continued to be used by Israeli Defence Forces after the creation of Israel. The Israeli police still use the M1 carbine as a standard long gun for non-combat elements and Mash'az volunteers.

French Army[edit]

The U.S. provided France with 269,644 M1 and M2 carbines from World War II to 1963.[71] The carbines were used by the French Paratroopers and Legionnaires, as well specialists (drivers, radio operators, engineers), during the Indo-China War,[79] the Algerian War[80] and the Suez Crisis.

South Vietnamese Popular Force members on patrol with M1 carbines.
ROK troops armed with M1 carbines during the Vietnam War.
Che Guevara atop a mule in Las Villas province, Cuba, in November 1958, with an M2 Carbine.

South Vietnam[edit]

The U.S. provided the Army of the Republic of Vietnam with 793,994 M1 and M2 carbines from 1963 to 1973.[71] Along with tens of thousands of Carbines left behind by the French after the First Indochina War, the M1 and M2 carbines were the most widely issued small arm during the early stages in the Vietnam War and remained in service in large numbers until the fall of Saigon. The South Vietnamese would also receive 220,300 M1 Garands and 520 M1C/M1D rifles,[81] and 640,000 M-16 rifles.

The Việt Minh and the Viet Cong also used large numbers of M1 and M2 Carbines, captured from the French, ARVN and local militia forces of South Vietnam, as well as receiving many thousands of Carbines from the North Vietnamese Army (NVA), China and North Korea. Over time, the SKS and eventually the AK-47 would replace the Carbine to become the dominant weapons used by the Viet Cong.

South Korea[edit]

The Republic of Korea Armed Forces received 1,015,568 M1 and M2 carbines from 1963 to 1972.[71] Along with hundreds of thousands of Carbines and M1 Garands provided by the United States Army before, during and shortly after the Korean war, South Korea would become the largest single recipient of American M1 and M2 carbines.

South Korea also took an active role in the Vietnam War. From 1964 to 1973, South Korea sent more than 300,000 troops to South Vietnam armed primarily with M1 and M2 carbines, as well as M1 Garands.

Philippines[edit]

The government of the Philippines still issues M1 carbines to the infantrymen of the Philippine Army's 2nd Infantry Division[citation needed] assigned in Luzon Island (some units are issued just M14 Automatic Rifles and M1 Carbines) and the Civilian Auxiliary Forces Geographical Unit (CAFGU) and Civilian Volunteer Organizations (CVO)spread throughout the Philippines. Certain provincial police units of the Philippine National Police (PNP) still use government-issue M1 carbines as well as some operating units of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI). In many provinces of the Philippines, M1 carbines are still highly valued as a light small arm. Elements of the New People's Army and Islamic Secessionist movement value the carbine as a lightweight weapon and preferred choice for mountain and ambush operations.

The M1 carbine has become one of the most recognized firearms in Philippine society, with the Marikina City-based company ARMSCOR Philippines still continuing to manufacture .30 caliber ammunition for the Philippine market.

Counter insurgency[edit]

The M1 and M2 carbines were widely used by military, police, and security forces and their opponents during the many guerrilla and civil wars throughout Latin America until the 1990s, when they were mostly replaced by more modern designs. A notable user was Che Guevara who used them during the Cuban Revolution and in Bolivia where he was executed by a Bolivian soldier armed with an M2 Carbine.[82]

In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, a police battalion named Batalhão de Operações Policiais Especiais (BOPE, or 'Special Police Operations Battalion') still uses the M1 carbine.

Users[edit]

The unit data provided below refers to original U.S. Ordnance contract carbines the United States provided these countries. Many countries sold, traded, destroyed, and/or donated these carbines to other countries and/or private gun brokers.[71]

Current users[edit]

South Korean soldiers training with M1919A6s. Note: ROK soldier armed with M1 carbine to the left. Photo taken August 13, 1950
  • Bolivia: 13,438 units.[71] Still in use with Garras del Valor[citation needed]
  • Brazil: (1944–1945, Brazilian Expeditionary Force). In service with BOPE from Rio de Janeiro[83]
  • Indonesia: Used by Indonesian Armed Forces in 1950s and 1960s. Still in service of Indonesian National Police[citation needed]
  • Israel: 10,000 units[71](1945–1957, Israel Defense Forces). (1970s–present, Israel Police; 1974–present, Civil Guard)
  • Italy: 146,863 units[71](Carabinieri, as of 1992). Still in use by the Nunziatella military academy. Known in the Italian Army as the Carabina «Winchester» M1 cal. 7,62 and Carabina «Winchester» M2 cal. 7,62.[84]
  • Philippines: 8,831 units[71](Pre and Post-World War II, 1942–1970s) Reserve with Philippine navy
  • South Korea: 1,015,558 units[71] (1950s–present, Reserve Force)
  • Suriname: (?-present, Army)
  • Taiwan: 115,948 units[71] (1950s–present)

Former users[edit]

  • Algeria: (Captured in large numbers from French military personnel during the Algerian Independence War)[85]
  • Angola: 12,215 units[71]
    • FNLA: (Unknown number captured/illegally acquired for use during the Angolan Civil War)[86]
  • Argentina: 12,621 units[71]
  • Austria: 39,005 units[71][87](1950s–70s, Austrian Army and Police)
  • Bavaria: 14,647 units[88](1945–early 1950s, Border Guard)
  • Burma: 28,792 units[71]
  • Cambodia: 115,568 units[71] (Khmer Republic)[89] (1967–1975)
  • Canada: 230 units,[71] M2 variant seen in use by Canadian law enforcement personnel responding to the 1984 Quebec National Assembly Shooting.[90]
  • Chile: 2,877 units[71]
  • China: 361 units[71]
  • Colombia: 7,037 units[71]
  • Costa Rica: 6,000 units[71]
  • Cuba: 118 units in 1963.[71] M1 carbines were used by Batista forces, by Castrist militias and by Brigade 2506.[1]
  • Democratic Republic of Congo[91]
  • Ecuador: 576 units[71]
  • El Salvador: 5000 M1s and ~156 M2s until 1965, more delivered during the 1960s and 1970s.[92]
Ethiopian soldiers deployed with U.S.-made weapons somewhere in Korea, 1953. Note the M1 Carbine with two 30-round magazines taped together 'Jungle style'.
  • Ethiopia: 16,417 units[71][93]
  • France: 269,644 units[71](1954–1962, Algerian War) Classified as the Mousqueton Américain M1 Calibre .30 ('M1 Carbine, American, .30-caliber') in Metropolitan French service.
    • French Indochina: 35,429 units[71]
  • Nazi Germany: No recorded issue.[94] Captured M1 carbines were classified as the Selbstladekarabiner 455(a) ('Self-loading carbine #455 (American)').[24] There are staged pictures of late-warFallschirmjäger troops and SS Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler ('Adolf Hitler's SS Bodyguard Regiment') soldiers armed with them.[24]
  • West Germany: 34,192 units[71] German Border Guard, some Police forces and German Army paratroopers (1950s–1960s)
  • Greece: 38,264 units[71](Hellenic (Greek) Air Force until mid-1990s)
  • Guatemala: 6063 units[71][95]
  • Honduras: 5,581 units[71]
  • Iceland: Icelandic Police. No longer in service.
  • Iran: 10,000 units[71]
  • Ireland: (1969–1980s, Used by the Provisional IRA, Official IRA, INLA and IPLO during the early years of their campaign and beyond.[96][97] Over 50 of which were smuggled by Harrison Network.)
  • Japan: 3,974 units[71](National Police Reserve)(1950–1989)
  • Jordan: 1912 units.[71] Fielded during the Six-Day War[98]
  • Kingdom of Laos: Received 74,587 units during Vietnam War and Laotian Civil War 1955-1975.[71][99]
  • Lebanon: 900 units[71]
  • Liberia: 80 units[71][100]
  • Libya: 106 units[71]
  • Malaysia[101]
  • Mexico: 48,946 units[71](police departments and security forces)
  • Morocco: 945 units[71]
Dutch police officer shoots teargas ammunition from the muzzle of an M1 carbine, during a blockade and demonstration against the nuclear power plant Dodewaard. September 18, 1981
  • Netherlands: 84,523 units[71](1940s–1970s, Army and Police)
  • Nicaragua: 121 units[71]
  • Nigeria: 100 units[71]
  • Norway: 98,267 units[71](Norwegian Army 1951–1970, with some Norwegian police units until the 1990s)
  • Pakistan: 45 units[71]
  • Panama: 917 units[71]
  • Peru: 821 units[71]
  • Saudi Arabia: Used by the Saudi Army.[citation needed]
  • Thailand: 73,012 units[71] Locally known as the ปสบ.87.
  • Tunisia: 771 units[71]
  • Turkey: 450 units.[71] Used in Korean War.[citation needed]
  • United Kingdom: 200,766 units[71] (Limited use by the British military from 1943 to the 1960s and by the Royal Ulster Constabulary in Northern Ireland until the 1980s)
  • United States: 6,110,730 units[71](1940s–60s/70s, Armed Forces and 1940s-present, various law enforcement agencies, and the Tennessee Valley Authority)
  • Uruguay: 32,346 units[71]
  • Soviet Union: 7 units[71]
  • Vietnam: (Largely captured and/or inherited from now-defunct Army of the Republic of Vietnam)[71][102] 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.[103]
    • South Vietnam: 793,994 units[71] (1960s–70s)
  • Chetniks (OSS-supplied during WW2)[104]

Variants[edit]

The standard-issue versions of the carbine officially listed and supported were the M1, M1A1, M2 and M3.[105]

M1A1 Carbine. Paratrooper model with folding buttstock and late issue adjustable sight and bayonet lug.

Carbine, Cal .30, M1A1[edit]

  • Side-folding stock, 15-round magazine
  • Paratrooper model
  • About 150,000 produced

Carbines originally issued with the M1A1 folding stock were made by Inland, a division of General Motors and originally came with the early 'L' nonadjustable sight and barrel band without bayonet lug. Inland production of M1A1 carbines was interspersed with Inland production of M1 carbines with the standard stock. Stocks were often swapped out as carbines were refurbished at arsenals. An original Inland carbine with an original M1A1 stock is rare today.

Carbine, Cal .30, M1A2[edit]

  • Proposed variant with improved sight adjustable for windage and elevation
  • Produced only as 'overstamped' model (an arsenal-refurbished M1 with new rear sight and other late M1 improvements)

Carbine, Cal .30, M1A3[edit]

  • Underside-folding pantograph stock, 15-round magazine.
  • Type standardized to replace the M1A1 but may not have been issued.
  • Pantograph stock was more rigid than the M1A1's folding stock and folded flush under the fore end. A more common name for this type of stock is an underfolder.

Carbine, Cal .30, M2[edit]

M2 Carbine, note: the selector lever on the left side, opposite of the bolt handle.
Exploded view of the M2 Carbine.
  • Early 1945
  • Selective fire (capable of fully automatic fire)
  • 30-round magazine or 15 standard issue
  • About 600,000 produced

Initially, the M1 carbine was intended to have a selective-fire capability, but the decision was made to put the M1 into production without this feature. Fully automatic capability was incorporated into the design of the M2 (an improved, selective-fire version of the M1), introduced in 1944. The M2 featured the late M1 improvements to the rear sight, addition of a bayonet lug, and other minor changes.

Research into a conversion kit for selective fire began May 1944; the first kit was developed by Inland engineers, and known as the T4. Inland was awarded a contract for 500 T4 carbines in September 1944. Although the conversion was seen as satisfactory, the heavier 30-round magazineput greater strain on the magazine catch, necessitating the development of a sturdier catch. The slide, sear, and stock design also had to be modified. On fully automatic fire, the T4 model could fire about 750 rounds per minute, but generated a manageable recoil.[106]

Although some carbines were marked at the factory as M2, the only significant difference between an M1 and M2 carbine is in the fire control group. The military issued field conversion kits (T17 and T18) to convert an M1 to an M2. Legally a carbine marked M2 is always a machine gun for national firearms registry purposes.

These M2 parts including the heavier M2 stock were standardized for arsenal rebuild of M1 and M1A1 carbines.

A modified round bolt replaced the original flat top bolt to save machining steps in manufacture. Many sources erroneously refer to this round bolt as an 'M2 bolt' but it was developed as a standard part for new manufacture M1 and later M2 carbines and as a replacement part, with priority given to use on M1A1 and M2 carbines.[107] The slightly heavier round bolt did moderate the cyclic rate of the M2 on full automatic.[108]

Despite being in demand, very few M2 carbines saw use during World War II, and then mostly in the closing days against Japan.[109] The M2 carbine was logistically compatible with the millions of M1 carbines in U.S. service, and offered longer range, better accuracy and better penetration than (pistol caliber) submachine guns like the M1 Thompsons and M3 Grease Guns.[110] Therefore, after World War II, the M2 carbine largely replaced the submachine-guns in U.S. service, until it was itself replaced by the M16 rifle.[51]

The M2 model was the most widely used Carbine variant during the Korean War.[111] A detailed study of the effectiveness of the M2 in the war was assembled by S. L. A. Marshall. He found that many troops complained on the lack of effective range of the gun, which allowed the enemy to get close enough to throw hand grenades. A more detailed analysis showed however that most troops who complained actually tended to run low on ammo, because they fired their M2 on fully automatic too soon. Troops who fired their guns on semi-automatic at distance generally complained less about the M2's effectiveness. Generally, the more seasoned troops used the latter approach. The carbine was usually given to second line troops (administrative, support, etc.), who had little combat experience and also did not have much training in small-unit tactics, but who usually had to engage the enemy at some critical moment, like a breakthrough or ambush. Marshall noted that almost all killing shots with carbines in Korea were at ranges of 50 yards or less. It was unsurprising therefore that the M2 was a preferred weapon for night patrols.[112] The M2 was also used in the early stages of the Vietnam War by special forces, ARVN advisers, and air crews.[113]

Contemporary authors have struggled to categorize the M2 carbine. On one hand, it is more powerful than a submachine gun and is considered by some to be an assault rifle, even though it fires a projectile considerably less powerful than the StG 44's 7.92×33mm Kurz. On the other hand, the M2 can also be considered a precursor of the modern personal defense weapon (PDW) concept, even though contemporary guns in that category, like the FN P90, fire substantially different cartridges like the 5.7×28mm.[114]

Carbine, Cal. 30, M2A2[edit]

  • Arsenal-refurbished (overstamped M2) model

Carbine, Cal .30, M3[edit]

  • M2 with mounting (T3 mount) for an early active (infrared) night vision sight
  • About 3,000 produced
  • Three versions of night sight (M1, M2, M3)
Original Korean War era USMC M3 Night Vision Scope

The M3 carbine was an M2 carbine fitted with a mount designed to accept an infrared sight for use at night. It was initially used with the M1 sniperscope, and an active infrared sight, and saw action in 1945 with the Army during the invasion of Okinawa. Before the M3 carbine and M1 sniperscope were type-classified, they were known as the T3 and T120, respectively. The system continued to be developed, and by the time of the Korean War, the M3 carbine was used with the M3 sniperscope.

The M2 sniper scope extended the effective nighttime range of the M3 carbine to 100 yards. In the later stages of the Korean War, an improved version of the M3 carbine, with a revised mount, a forward pistol grip, and a new M3 sniperscope design was used in the latter stages of Korea and briefly in Vietnam. The M3 sniperscope had a large active infrared spotlight mounted on top of the scope body itself, allowing use in the prone position. The revised M3/M3 had an effective range of around 125 yards.[49] Eventually, the M3 carbine and its M3 sniperscope would be superseded by passive-design night vision scopes with extended visible ranges; the improved scopes in turn required the use of rifle-caliber weapons with flatter trajectories and increased hit probability.

Inland m1 carbine for sale

Derivatives[edit]

Ingram SAM[edit]

The Ingram SAM rifles are M1 carbine derivatives in 5.56×45mm NATO (SAM-1), 7.62×39mm (SAM-2) and 7.62×51mm NATO (SAM-3). The 5.56×45mm versions accept M16 magazines, the 7.62×39mm accept AK magazines and the 7.62×51mm versions use FN FAL magazines. They did not catch on in competition against the Ruger Mini-14 in both the police and civilian markets. The Ingram SAM rifles are occasionally found on auction sites for collectors.

Military contractors[edit]

  • Inland Division, General Motors (production: 2,632,097), sole producer of the M1A1 Carbine. Receiver marked 'INLAND DIV.'
  • Winchester Repeating Arms (production: 828,059) Receiver marked 'WINCHESTER'[115]
  • Irwin-Pedersen (operated by Saginaw Steering Gear and production included with Saginaw total)
  • Saginaw Steering Gear Division, General Motors (production: 517,213 ) Receivers marked 'SAGINAW S.G.' (370,490), 'SAGINAW S'G' (for weapons manufactured in Grand Rapids) and 'IRWIN-PEDERSEN' (146,723 )
  • Underwood Elliot Fisher (production: 545,616) Receiver marked 'UNDERWOOD'
  • National Postal Meter (production: 413,017) Receiver marked 'NATIONAL POSTAL METER'
  • Quality Hardware Manufacturing Corp. (production: 359,666) Receiver marked 'QUALITY H.M.C.'
  • International Business Machines (production: 346,500) Receiver marked 'I.B.M. CORP.' Also barrel marked 'IBM Corp'
  • Standard Products (production: 247,100) Receiver marked 'STD. PRO.'
  • Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation (production: 228,500) Receiver Marked 'ROCK-OLA'[116]
  • Commercial Controls Corporation (production: 239) Receiver marked 'COMMERCIAL CONTROLS'

Commercial copies[edit]

Several companies manufactured copies of the M1 carbine after World War II, which varied in quality. Some companies used a combination of original USGI and new commercial parts, while others manufactured entire firearms from new parts, which may or may not be of the same quality as the originals. These copies were marketed to the general public and police agencies but were not made for or used by the U.S. military.

In 1963, firearms designer Melvin M. Johnson introduced a version of the M1 carbine called the 'Spitfire' that fired a 5.7 mm (.22 in) wildcat cartridge known as the 5.7 mm MMJ or .22 Spitfire.[16] The Spitfire fired a 40-grain (2.6 g) bullet with a muzzle velocity of 2850 ft/s (870 m/s) for a muzzle energy of 720 foot-pounds force (980 J).[117] Johnson advertised the smaller caliber and the modified carbine as a survival rifle for use in jungles or other remote areas.[117] While the concept had some military application when used for this role in the selective-fire M2 carbine, it was not pursued, and few Spitfire carbines were made.[117]

An Auto-Ordnance AOM-130 Carbine manufactured in 2007.

More recently, the Auto-Ordnance division of Kahr Arms began production of an M1 carbine replica in 2005 based on the typical M1 carbine as issued in 1944, without the later adjustable sight or barrel band with bayonet lug. The original Auto-Ordnance had produced various parts for IBM carbine production during World War II, but did not manufacture complete carbines until the introduction of this replica. The AOM110 and AOM120 models (no longer produced) featured birch stocks and handguards, Parkerized receivers, flip-style rear sights and barrel bands without bayonet lugs. The current AOM130 and AOM140 models are identical except for American walnut stocks and handguards.[118][119]

In 2014, Inland Manufacturing, LLC in Dayton, Ohio introduced the reproduction of the 'Inland M1 Carbine'. Inland Manufacturing, LLC is a private entity that is producing reproductions of the M1 Carbine and M1A1 Paratrooper models that were built by the original Inland Division of General Motors from 1941 to 1945. The new Inland M1 carbines feature many of the same characteristics of the original Inland Carbines and are manufactured in the USA. The M1 carbine is modeled after the last production model that Inland manufactured in 1945 and features a type 3 bayonet lug / barrel band, adjustable rear sights, push button safety, round bolt, and 'low wood' walnut stock, and a 15-round magazine. A 30-round mag catch was utilized to allow high-capacity magazines. A '1944' M1 Carbine is also available that has the same features as the 1945 only with a Type 2 barrel Band and 10-round magazine and is available for sale in most states with magazine capacity & bayonet lug restrictions. The M1A1 is modeled after a late production 1944 M1A1 Paratrooper model with a folding 'low wood' walnut stock, Type two barrel band, and includes the same adjustable sights which were actually introduced in 1944.[120]

An Israeli arms company (Advanced Combat Systems) offers a modernized bullpup variant called the Hezi SM-1.[121] The company claims accuracy of 1.5 MOA at 100 yards (91 m).[122]

Commercial manufacturers[edit]

  • Alpine of Azusa, Calif.[123]
  • AMAC of Jacksonville, Ark. (acquired Iver Johnson Arms)[124]
  • AMPCO of Miami, Fla.[125]
  • Auto-Ordnance
  • Bullseye Gun Works of Miami, Fla.[126]
  • Crosman Air Rifle; produced an M1 Carbine lookalike[127]
  • ERMA's Firearms Manufacturing of Steelville, Mo.[128]
  • Erma Werke of Dachau, Bavaria serviced carbines used by the West German police post World War II. Manufactured replacement parts for the same carbines. Manufactured .22 replica carbines for use as training rifles for police in West Germany and Austria and for commercial export worldwide.[129][130]
  • Federal Ordnance of South El Monte, Calif.[131]
  • Fulton Armory of Savage, MD[132]
  • Global Arms[133]
  • H&S of Plainfield, NJ (Haas & Storck, predecessor of Plainfield Machine)[134]
  • Howa of Nagoya, Japan, made carbines and parts for the post-World War II Japanese and Thai militaries, and limited numbers of a hunting rifle version[135]
  • Inland Manufacturing of Dayton, Ohio[136]
  • Israel Arms International (IAI) of Houston, Texas assembled carbines from parts from other sources[137]
  • The Iver Johnson Arms of Plainfield, NJ and later Jacksonville, Ark., (acquired M1 Carbine operations of Plainfield Machine) and followed the lead of Universal in producing a pistol version called the 'Enforcer'.[138]
  • Johnston-Tucker of St. Louis, Mo.[139]
  • Millvile Ordnance (MOCO) of Union, N.J. (predecessor of H&S)[140]
  • National Ordnance of Azusa, Calif. and later South El Monte, Calif.[141]
  • NATO of Atlanta, GA[142]
  • Plainfield Machine Company of Plainfield, N.J. and later Middlesex, N.J. (P.O. Box in Dunellen, N.J.), M1 Carbine manufacture later purchased and operated by Iver Johnson[143]
  • Rock Island Armory of Geneseo, Ill.[144]
  • Rowen, Becker Company of Waterville, Ohio[145]
  • Springfield Armory of Geneseo, Ill.[146]
  • Texas Armament Co. of Brownwood, Tex.[147]
  • Tiroler Sportwaffenfabrik und Apparatenbau GmbH of Kugstein, Austria manufactured an air rifle that looked and operated like the M1 Carbine for use in training by Austria and West Germany.[148]
  • Universal Firearms of Hialeah, Fla. – Early Universal guns were, like other manufacturers, assembled from USGI parts. However, beginning in 1968, the company began producing the 'New Carbine', which externally resembled the M1 but was in fact a completely new firearm internally, using a different receiver, bolt carrier, bolt, recoil spring assembly, etc. with almost no interchangeability with GI-issue carbines.[149] Universal was acquired by Iver Johnson in 1983 and moved to Jacksonville, Ark. in 1985.
  • Williams Gun Sight of Davison, Mich. produced a series of 50 sporterized M1 Carbines[150]

Hunting and civilian use[edit]

Patty Hearst holding a sawed-off M1 'Enforcer' Carbine during her infamous bank robbery attempt.

After World War II, the M1 carbine became a popular plinking and ranch rifle. It is still popular with civilian shooters around the world and is prized as a historically significant collector's item. The Carbine continues to be used in military marksmanship training and competitive target matches conducted by rifle clubs affiliated with the Civilian Marksmanship Program (CMP).

The M1 carbine can be used for big-game hunting, such as white-tailed deer and mule deer at close range (less than 100 yards), but is definitely underpowered for larger North American game such as elk, moose, and bear. A standard .30 Carbine soft-point round weighs 110 grains (7.1 g) and has a muzzle velocity of about 1,990 ft/s (610 m/s) giving it about 967 ft⋅lbf (1,311 joules) of energy.[151] By comparison, a 110gr .357 Magnum bullet fired from an 18' rifle barrel, has a muzzle velocity of 1718 ft/s (523 m/s) and 720 ft/lb (976 joules) of muzzle energy.[152] 30 Carbine sporting ammunition is factory recommended for hunting and control of large varmints like coyote, fox or bobcat.[151]

Some U.S. states prohibit use of the .30 Carbine cartridge for hunting deer and larger animals due to a lessened chance of killing an animal in a single shot, even with expanding bullets. The M1 Carbine is also prohibited for hunting in several states such as Pennsylvania[153] because of the semi-automatic function, and Illinois[154] which prohibits all non-muzzleloading rifles for big game hunting. Five-round magazines are commercially made for use in states that limit the capacity of semi-automatic hunting rifles.

Some indoor pistol ranges may permit the firing of an M1 carbine, as its bullet is comparable to magnum handgun rounds, whereas an AR-15, AK-47 or other high-velocity rifle might penetrate the backstop.

New Jersey lists the 'M1 Carbine Type' as a banned assault firearm although most examples of the M1 Carbine technically meet the restrictions on semi-automatic rifles identified by the state. Although not banned by name, make or model, M1 Carbines may in some cases be classified as contraband assault weapon under the 2013 NY SAFE act if they feature bayonet lugs, pistol grips, folding stocks and flash suppressors. 10-round magazines are available in states that restrict magazine capacity for civilian firearms.

The M1 carbine was also used by various law enforcement agencies and prison guards, and was prominently carried by riot police during the civil unrest of the late 1960s and early 1970s; until it was replaced in those roles by more modern .223 caliber semi-automatic rifles such as the Ruger Mini-14 and the Colt AR-15 type rifles in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

The ease of use and great adaptability of the weapon led to it being used by Malcolm X and Patty Hearst. Both were featured in famous news photographs carrying the carbine. An M1 was also the weapon used in the 1947 assassination of notorious American mobster Benjamin 'Bugsy' Siegel.

Related equipment and accessories[edit]

Ammunition types[edit]

The ammunition used by the military with the carbine include:[155]

  • Cartridge, Caliber .30, Carbine, Ball, M1
  • Cartridge, Grenade, Caliber .30, M6 (also authorized for other blank firing uses, due to a lack of a dedicated blank cartridge)
  • Cartridge, Caliber .30, Carbine, Dummy, M13
  • Cartridge, Caliber .30, Carbine, Ball, Test, High Pressure, M18
  • Cartridge, Caliber .30, Carbine, Tracer, M16 (also rated as having an incendiary effect)
  • Cartridge, Caliber .30, Carbine, Tracer, M27 (dimmer illumination and no incendiary effect)

See also[edit]

  • List of U.S. Army weapons by supply catalog designation SNL B-28

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abde Quesada, Alejandro (10 Jan 2009). The Bay of Pigs: Cuba 1961. Elite 166. Osprey Publishing. p. 60. ISBN9781846033230.
  2. ^Katz, Sam (24 Mar 1988). Arab Armies of the Middle East Wars (2). Men-at-Arms 128. Osprey Publishing. pp. 40–41. ISBN9780850458008.
  3. ^Thompson, Leroy (2011). The M1 Carbine. Osprey. p. 25. ISBN978 1 84908 619 6.
  4. ^The M1 Carbine by Leroy Thompson
  5. ^Meche, W. Derek, M1 Carbine: The collector's item you can actually use, Guns.com, 6 June 2013, http://www.guns.com/review/2013/06/06/m1-carbine/Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ abcMilitary Small Arms of the 20th Century. 7th Edition. Ian V. Hogg & John S. Weeks. Krause Publications. 2000. p. 290
  7. ^International Encyclopedia of Military History. James C. Bradford. Routledge, Dec 1, 2004. p. 886
  8. ^ abcdeGeorge, John, Shots Fired In Anger, (2nd ed., enlarged), Washington, D.C.: NRA Press, ISBN0-935998-42-X, 9780935998429 (1981), p. 394
  9. ^Weeks, John, World War II Small Arms, London: Orbis Publishing Ltd. and New York: Galahad Books, ISBN0-88365-403-2, ISBN978-0-88365-403-3 (1979), p. 130
  10. ^tnoutdoors9 (2 October 2012). 'M1 Carbine at 300 Yards' – via YouTube.
  11. ^Larry Ruth, M1 Carbine: Design, Development & Production, (The Gun Room Press, 1979, ISBN0-88227-020-6) contains many Ordnance documents related to the 'Light Rifle' specification that led to the M1 carbine
  12. ^Larry Ruth, M1 Carbine: Design, Development & Production, Gun Room Press, 1979.
  13. ^ abcCanfield, Bruce N., 'Carbine' Williams: Myth & Reality', The American Rifleman, February 2009.
  14. ^Bishop, Chris (1998). The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II. New York: Orbis Publishing Ltd. ISBN0-7607-1022-8..
  15. ^E.H. Harrison, 'Who Designed the M1 Carbine?', in U.S. Caliber .30 Carbine, NRA American Rifleman Reprint.
  16. ^ abcBarnes, Frank C., Cartridges of the World, Iola WI: DBI Books Inc., ISBN0-87349-033-9, ISBN978-0-87349-033-7 (6th ed., 1989), p. 52
  17. ^ abGreen Beret in Vietnam: 1957–73. Gordon Rottman. Osprey Publishing, 2002. p. 41
  18. ^Roberts, Joe American Rifleman (December 2007) p.20
  19. ^Dunlap, Roy, Ordnance Went Up Front, Samworth Press (1948), p. 293
  20. ^ abShore, C. (Capt), With British Snipers To The Reich, Lancer Militaria Press (1988), pp. 191–95
  21. ^http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/FM/PDFs/FM23-7.PDF FM 23-7. WAR DEPARTMENT BASIC FIELD MANUAL. U. S. CARBINE, CALIBER .30, Ml. May 20, 1942
  22. ^ abcThe M1 Carbine, Leroy Thompson, Bloomsbury Publishing, Nov 20, 2011. pp. 26, 27
  23. ^Jane's Gun Recognition Guide. Ian Hogg & Terry Gander. HarperCollins Publishers. 2005. p. 330
  24. ^ abcde'The M1 carbine – short history'. RJ Militaria. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  25. ^US Marine Corps 1941–45, By Gordon Rottman Osprey Publishing. Copyright 1995, page 14.
  26. ^Green Beret in Vietnam: 1957–73, By Gordon Rottman Osprey Publishing. 2002, p. 41.
  27. ^'Carbine magazine catches'. CMP. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  28. ^http://www.gunsandammo.com/blogs/history-books/m1-carbine-americas-unlikely-warrior/ Guns & Ammo. M1 Carbine: America's Unlikely Warrior. by Garry James. October 6th, 2014
  29. ^'Collecting The M1 carbine'. RJ Militaria. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  30. ^Cartridges and Firearm Identification. By Robert E. Walker, CRC Press, p. 254
  31. ^ abRuth, Larry L. War Baby: The U.S. Caliber .30 Carbine, Vol. 1, Collector Grade Publications, ISBN0-88935-117-1, ISBN978-0-88935-117-2 (1992), pp. 621–23
  32. ^ abDunlap, Roy, Ordnance Went Up Front, Plantersville, SC: Small-Arms Technical Pub. Co., The Samworth Press, ISBN1-884849-09-1 (1948), p. 240
  33. ^'Wayback Machine'. 11 November 2013. Archived from the original on 11 November 2013.Cite uses deprecated parameter dead-url= (help)
  34. ^'A Pocket History of the M1 Carbine' – Fulton ArmoryArchived 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^Rush, Robert S., GI: The US Infantryman in World War II, Osprey Publishing Ltd. (2003), ISBN1-84176-739-5, p. 33: Officers were issued .45 M1911 pistols as individual weapons until 1943, when they were issued the M1 Carbine in place of the pistol.
  36. ^Rush, Robert S., GI: The US Infantryman in World War II, Osprey Publishing Ltd. (2003), ISBN1-84176-739-5, pp. 33–35: Officers and NCOs, as well as airborne and other elite troops were frequently allowed to exchange with Ordnance personnel for their individual weapon of choice.
  37. ^ ab'T/O&E 7-17 Infantry Rifle Company'(PDF). US Government (War Department). 1944-02-26. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  38. ^Shore, C. (Capt), With British Snipers To The Reich, Mount Ida AR: Lancer Militaria Press, ISBN0-935856-02-1, ISBN978-0-935856-02-6 (1988), pp. 191–95: Small-statured men such as Capt. Shore and Sgt. Audie Murphy liked the carbine, as its small stock dimensions fit them particularly well.
  39. ^McManus, John C., The Deadly Brotherhood: The American Combat Soldier in World War II, New York: Random House Publishing, ISBN0-89141-823-7 (1998), p. 52: Sergeant Herbert Miller of the U.S. 6th Armored Division stated that he 'was very happy with the carbine .. It's fast, it's easy to use in a hurry. For churches and houses and things like that, it was good.'
  40. ^Gavin, James M. (Lt. Gen.), War and Peace in the Space Age, New York: Harper and Brothers (1958), pp. 57, 63: Col. Gavin's love affair with his M1A1 carbine ended in Sicily, when his carbine and that of Maj. Vandervoort jammed repeatedly. Noticing that carbine fire rarely suppressed rifle fire from German infantry, he and Vandervoort traded with wounded soldiers for their M1 rifles and ammunition; Gavin carried an M1 rifle for the rest of the war.
  41. ^Burgett, Donald, Seven Roads To Hell, New York: Dell Publishing (1999), ISBN0-440-23627-4 pp. 153–54: Burgett, a machine-gunner in the 101st Airborne from Normandy to the Battle of the Bulge, witnessed several failures of the .30 carbine to stop German soldiers after being hit.
  42. ^Chapman, F. Spencer, The Jungle Is Neutral: A Soldier's Two-Year Escape from the Japanese Army, Lyons Press, 1st ed., ISBN1-59228-107-9, ISBN978-1-59228-107-7 (2003), p. 300
  43. ^ abcDunlap, Roy, Ordnance Went Up Front, Samworth Press (1948), p. 297
  44. ^McManus, John C., The Deadly Brotherhood: The American Combat Soldier in World War II, New York: Random House Publishing, ISBN0-89141-823-7 (1998), p. 52: Private Richard Lovett of the U.S. Americal Division noted that 'It didn't have stopping power. Enemy soldiers were shot many times but kept on coming.'
  45. ^U.S. Army, Handbook on Japanese Military Forces: Body armor, Technical Manual, 15 September 1944, Chap. X, sec. 4(b) http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/IJA/HB/HB-10.html
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  50. ^ abcLeroy Thompson (2011). The M1 Carbine. Osprey Publishing. p. 57. ISBN978-1-84908-907-4.
  51. ^ abThe M16. by Gordon Rottman. Osprey Publishing 2011. p. 6
  52. ^Leroy Thompson (2011). The M1 Carbine. Osprey Publishing. p. 35. ISBN978-1-84908-907-4.
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  60. ^Clavin, Tom, Last Stand of Fox Company, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN0-87113-993-6, ISBN978-0-87113-993-1 (2009), p. 113: In addition to their bulky cotton-padded telegroika coats, which could freeze solid with perspiration, Chicom infantry frequently wore vests or undercoats of thick goatskin.
  61. ^Jowett, Philip S., The Chinese Army 1937–49: World War II and Civil War, Osprey Publishing, ISBN978-1-84176-904-2 (2005), p. 47
  62. ^Thomas, Nigel, The Korean War 1950–53, Osprey Publishing Ltd., ISBN0-85045-685-1, ISBN978-0-85045-685-1 (1986), p. 47
  63. ^Andrew, Martin (Dr.), Logistics in the PLA, Army Sustainment, Vol. 42, Issue 2, March–April 2010
  64. ^Thomas, Nigel, The Korean War 1950–53, Osprey Publishing Ltd., ISBN0-85045-685-1, ISBN978-0-85045-685-1 (1986), pp. 37, 47: Many Chinese troops carried either rice or shaoping, an unleavened bread flour mixture in a fabric tube slung over the shoulder.
  65. ^Chinese troops frequently wore bandolier-type ammunition pouches and carried extra PPSh or Thompson magazines in addition to 4–5 stick grenades.
  66. ^Russ, Martin, Breakout: The Chosin Reservoir Campaign: Korea 1950, Penguin Publishing, ISBN0-14-029259-4, ISBN978-0-14-029259-6 (2000), p. 40: The failure of the .30 carbine round to stop enemy soldiers may not have been due to inadequate penetration. Marine Lt. James Stemple reported that he shot an enemy soldier with his M2 carbine four times in the chest and saw the padding fly out the back of the soldier's padded jacket as the bullets penetrated his body, yet the enemy soldier kept on coming.
  67. ^Clavin, Tom, Last Stand of Fox Company, New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, ISBN0-87113-993-6, ISBN978-0-87113-993-1 (2009), pp. 82, 113
  68. ^O'Donnell, Patrick, Give Me Tomorrow: The Korean War's Greatest Untold Story, p. 88
  69. ^Spurr, Russell, Enter the Dragon: China's Undeclared War Against the U.S. in Korea, 1950–51, New York, NY: Newmarket Press, ISBN978-1-55704-914-8 (1998), p.182: Chinese frontline PLA troops disliked the M1/M2 carbine, as they believed its cartridge had inadequate stopping power. Captured U.S. carbines were instead issued to runners and mortar crews.
  70. ^ abcS.L.A. Marshall, Commentary on Infantry and Weapons in Korea 1950–51, 1st Report ORO-R-13 of 27 October 1951, Project Doughboy [Restricted], Operations Research Office (ORO), U.S. Army (1951)
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  107. ^Larry Ruth, M1 Carbine: Design, Development & Production, Gun Room Press, 1979, p.173.
  108. ^W.H.B. Smith, Small Arms of the World, Stackpole, 1966, illustrates an M2 carbine in an M1A1 stock on p.642 and a parts breakdown of the M2 on p.646 is shown with a flat top bolt.
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  114. ^Leroy Thompson (2011). The M1 Carbine. Osprey Publishing. pp. 68–70. ISBN978-1-84908-907-4.
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  118. ^'Auto-Ordnance M1 Carbines' – Auto-Ordnance.comArchived 2006-05-03 at the Wayback Machine
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Further reading[edit]

  • Barnes, Frank C., Cartridges of the World, Iola, WI: DBI Books Inc., ISBN0-87349-033-9, ISBN978-0-87349-033-7, (6th ed., 1989).
  • Canfield, Bruce N. (June 2007). 'A New Lease on Life: The Post-World War II M1 Carbine'. American Rifleman.
  • Dunlap, Roy F. Ordnance Went Up Front, Plantersville, SC: Small-Arms Technical Pub. Co., The Samworth Press, ISBN1-884849-09-1 (1948).
  • George, John (Lt. Col.), Shots Fired In Anger, (2nd ed., enlarged), Washington, D.C.: NRA Press, ISBN0-935998-42-X, 9780935998429 (1981).
  • Hufnagl, Wolfdieter. U.S.Karabiner M1 Waffe und Zubehör, Motorbuchverlag, 1994.
  • Laemlein, Tom., The M1 Carbine. Stamford, CT: Historical Archive Press, 2006. ISBN0-9748389-2-6OCLC82494967
  • Marshall, S.L.A., Commentary on Infantry and Weapons in Korea 1950–51, 1st Report ORO-R-13, Project Doughboy, Report ORO-R-13 of 27 October 1951 [Restricted], Operations Research Office (ORO), U.S. Army (1951).
  • Shore, C. (Capt), With British Snipers To The Reich, Mount Ida AR: Lancer Militaria Press, ISBN0-935856-02-1, ISBN978-0-935856-02-6 (1988).
  • United States Government. Departments of the Army and Air Force. TM 9-1305-200/TO 11A13-1-101 Small-Arms Ammunition. Washington, DC: Departments of the Army and Air Force, 1961.
  • U.S. Army Catalog of Standard Ordnance Items. Second Edition 1944, Volume III, p. 419
  • Weeks, John, World War II Small Arms, London: Orbis Publishing Ltd. and New York: Galahad Books, ISBN0-88365-403-2, ISBN978-0-88365-403-3 (1979).
  • Worrell, Jessica (2003). 'Range of a Rifle Bullet'. The Physics Factbook.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to M1 Carbine.
  • Bonnier Corporation (June 1942). 'Lightweight Carbine Increases Firepower'. Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. pp. 79–80.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=M1_carbine&oldid=913191277'

by Bruce N. Canfield - Wednesday, May 25, 2016

The U.S. M1A1 Carbine had a folding stock and was intended for issue to American Airborne troops during World War II. These troopers in Europe in 1944 have M1A1s.

This article was first published in American Rifleman, November 2005
The arm that holds the distinction of being manufactured in greater numbers than any other U.S. military firearm of World War II is the “U.S. Carbine, Caliber .30, M1.” The carbine represented a new category of service arm, initially intended to replace both the .45 ACP pistol and the Thompson submachine gun. Developed in 1941 by Winchester Repeating Arms Company and adopted after an exhaustive series of trials by the U.S. Army Ordnance Department, the carbine was a lightweight (roughly 5½ lbs.) semi-automatic shoulder arm that fired a .30-cal. cartridge fed from a detachable, 15-round box magazine.

The carbine was chiefly intended for issue to military personnel—including some officers—who would have been too burdened by the heavy M1 Garand rifle to carry out their primary duties. By the time production ceased in 1945, some 6 million carbines had been manufactured by 10 different prime contractors, and carbines were widely issued in all theaters of the Second World War.

As production continued, several variants of the M1 carbine were developed, including a selective-fire version—the M2—as well as a model designed to mount an infrared night-vision sight, the T3. However, other than the standard M1 Carbine, the variant that was manufactured in greater numbers, and which saw the widest issuance, was the “U.S. Carbine, Caliber .30, M1A1.” The M1A1 Carbine was designed for use by paratroopers and had a folding wire stock, which reduced the overall length when folded. The stock was fitted with a wooden pistol grip. The only difference between the standard M1 Carbine and the M1A1 carbine was the folding stock on the latter.

Except for the folding wire stock with its leather cheekpiece, there is no difference between an M1A1 carbine and a standard M1 carbine. The sling and oiler were the same, although the method of attachment was different. There were, however, some special accessories for the M1A1. The jump scabbard was fastened to the pistol belt at its top and the parachutist’s ankle at the bottom. It was essentially a big, padded holster for the M1A1 with its stock folded. Also, “rigger” pouches, holding four 15-round magazines, were made at the unit level.

Inland M1 Carbine Serial Numbers Dates


The M1A1 was officially standardized in May 1942, and the first deliveries began in October. The sole manufacturer of the M1A1 was the Inland Manufacturing Division of General Motors in Dayton, Ohio, which was also the largest manufacturer of standard M1 carbines. Inland produced about 43 percent of the total production of all carbines. In addition to M1s and M1A1s, the company produced the M2 and T3 variants. The initial subcontractor for the special M1A1 stock was Royal Typewriters, Inc., in Hartford, Conn. The wooden components of the stock were supplied by the S.E. Overton Company of South Haven, Mich., and Royal produced the wire butt and assembled the completed stocks. Royal apparently experienced some problems in its capacity as the lead subcontractor, and eventually, Overton assumed responsibility for assembling the M1A1 stocks and shipping them to the Inland factory.

There were two separate production runs of M1A1 Carbines. The so-called “First Contract” carbines were shipped between October 1942 and October 1943, with approximately 71,000 M1A1s delivered during the period. Serial numbers ranged approximately from 42,000 to 850,000. These M1A1s had the same features as the standard M1s of the era, including non-adjustable, flip-up rear sights; “high-wood” stocks (the area in front of the operating slide); narrow barrel bands (without bayonet lugs); and flat-top bolts.

There were two separate production runs of M1A1s. (Early “First Contract” U.S. M1A1 Carbine top.) The first were shipped between October 1942 and October 1943, and they had early carbine features, such as flip sights, high-wood stocks, flat-top bolts and narrow barrel bands. The second contract guns (“Second Contract” U.S. M1A1 Carbine btm.) date from May 1944 to December 1944 and had later carbine parts.


The second production run was between about May and December 1944 and created less than 70,000 M1A1s. Serial numbers ranged approximately from 5,150,000 to 6,700,000. Although the basic design of the M1A1 stock did not change, the majority of the “Second Contract” stocks had “low-wood” and a slightly different shape to the grip. Also, during the course of production, many of the later production carbines (M1 and M1A1) were fitted with improved components, such as adjustable rear sights, round bolts and wider barrel bands. There is some disagreement whether or not any of these carbines originally left the factory with T4 barrel bands (with the bayonet lug). If so, only extremely late production M1A1 Carbines would have this feature, and the vast majority had either the narrow Type 1 or the wider Type 2 barrel bands (both types without bayonet lugs).

Inland M1 Carbine Serial Numbers By Year

It must be stressed that the previously mentioned serial number ranges were only approximations, and there were no special serial number ranges assigned to the M1A1 production runs. M1A1 serial numbers were intermixed with standard M1 Carbines made by Inland during these periods. Therefore, as long as an Inland carbine is in the general serial number ranges already mentioned and has features consistent with the vintage of the stock, it is not possible to ascertain if an Inland action was originally mated with a M1A1 stock at the factory. Unfortunately, there is no known roster of M1A1 carbine serial numbers.

M1A1s were often issued with padded jump scabbards.


The M1A1 Carbine was generally issued with a padded canvas jump scabbard that attached to the pistol belt. The lower portion of the case could be strapped to the paratrooper’s leg during descent. Upon landing, the carbine could be quickly removed from the case, the stock opened and the gun ready for immediate use. Reportedly, the leg strap on the canvas case was rarely secured as it could cause injury (including broken legs) upon landing. Some paratroopers simply tucked the folded carbine behind their emergency parachute, or carried it in some other manner and dispensed with the jump scabbard altogether. The 15-round carbine magazines could be carried in either the standard two-cell, factory-made belt pouch or in rigger-made pouches fabricated by airborne unit riggers. These specially made pouches could hold either four, 15-round carbine magazines or three, eight-round Garand clips. Such pouches enabled more magazines to be carried on a paratrooper’s belt than was possible with the standard pouches. Similar rigger-made pouches were also constructed for the 20-round Thompson submachine gun magazines. M1A1 Carbines used the same type of sling as standard M1 Carbines.

As production allowed, the M1A1 Carbines were issued to all U.S. Army paratroop units, and they saw use in every American airborne operation of World War II, including Sicily, Normandy (D-Day), Market Garden and Operation Varsity (Rhine Jump). Limited numbers of M1A1 Carbines were also issued to the U.S. Marine Corps’ First Parachute Regiment, although the Marine paratroopers were never deployed in combat via airdrop. Not all paratroopers utilized M1A1 Carbines, and some were issued standard (full-stock) M1 Carbines instead.

The folding metal stock of the M1A1 Carbine was not well suited for launching rifle grenades due to the heavy recoil generated, which could bend or break the folding metal assembly. Regulations stated that the M1A1 was not to be used for grenade launching duties—except in emergency situations. If required, the recommended procedure when launching rifle grenades was to fold the stock and place the pistol grip of the carbine firmly on the ground.

Within the design parameters of the carbine, it performed adequately. It was only found lacking when compared to the venerable M1 Garand rifle, but the carbine was never intended to be a replacement for the rifle. Other than the limited-issue Marine Corps’ Reising Model 55 submachine gun, the M1A1 Carbine was the only World War II American small arm designed specifically for airborne use. The Second World War ended with the carbine firmly entrenched in the U.S. military’s inventory, and the M1A1 Carbine a mainstay of the American airborne units.

Following the war, the majority of American military arms—including carbines—were overhauled. The overhaul process consisted of inspecting the guns, disassembly, performing necessary repairs (including refinishing when required) and replacement of worn, broken or superseded parts. The carbines, including the M1A1, were typically fitted with updated parts, including adjustable rear sights, T4 barrel bands (with a bayonet lug), round bolts and rotary safeties. The earlier high-wood stocks were usually modified to the low-wood configuration as part of the rebuild procedure.

After overhaul, there was no effort made to replace the original barreled action in a refurbished M1A1 stock. Thus, while all original M1A1 carbines were made by Inland, a rebuilt example, conceivably, could have a barreled action made by any of the 10 prime contractors installed during the overhaul process. Regulations called for the identifying initials of the rebuilding entity to the stamped on the stock (typically the left side) after overhaul. Ordnance facilities that overhauled carbines in the post-World War II period included: Phonerescue license number.

RIA: Rock Island Arsenal
SA: Springfield Armory
AA: Augusta Arsenal (usually followed by another single letter)
RA: Raritan Arsenal
RRA or RRAD: Red River Arsenal or Red River Army Depot
SAA: San Antonio Arsenal
BA: Benicia Arsenal
AN: Anniston Arsenal

M1 Carbine Stock

The most common rebuild markings found on M1A1 Carbine stocks are those of Rock Island, Springfield or Augusta, although others may be noted. The Springfield Armory also fabricated some M1A1 stock components after World War II, which can be identified by the “SA” markings. These parts would only be found on post-World War II rebuilt examples.

Inland Division M1 Carbine Serial Numbers

Arsenal-overhauled M1A1 carbines were equal to factory-original carbines in functioning and performance as they were rebuilt to as-new standards. For today’s collectors, however, rebuilt examples do not typically have the same desirability or value as do specimens remaining in their original World War II factory configuration. For this reason, the practice of restoring overhauled carbines has been popular among many collectors. This process typically involves substituting the updated parts that were replaced during the overhaul procedure with the correct type of parts as installed at the factory. Some restorers go so far as to sand off—or otherwise remove—the arsenal-rebuild stamps on overhauled stocks. It should be noted that there is a big difference between original parts and correct parts. A restored carbine might be made correct, but it can never be made original. The wisdom and ethics of restoring overhauled arms is the subject of debate among many collectors today.

All M1A1 Carbines were made by the Inland Division of General Motors, regardless of when they were made during the war. Serial numbers were not distinguished between M1s and M1A1s. Approximate serial number blocks for M1A1s were 42,000 through 850,000 and 5,150,000 through 6,700,00.

In addition to restored examples, there have been many reproduction M1A1 Carbine stocks commercially manufactured for the past 30 years or so. Some of these are reasonable facsimiles of the originals, while others vary in a number of respects. None of the reproduction M1A1 stocks remotely approach the value and desirability of genuine examples, rebuilt or otherwise.

Genuine M1A1 Carbines are extremely popular in the collector market today, and prices are rising dramatically. Examples now change hands for prices that would have seemed almost unimaginable just a few years ago. The huge price differential between reproduction and original M1A1 stocks makes positive identification very important. There are several features to examine when attempting to identify a genuine M1A1 carbine stock. The most important are as follows:

  1. The inside of the stock (the barrel channel) will be marked “OI.” This denotes that the stock was manufactured by the Overton Company for Inland (Overton-Inland).
  2. The underside of the pistol grip on the First Contract M1A1 Carbines was also marked “OI” along with a small Ordnance Department crossed cannons escutcheon. Later production pistol grips were typically marked “RI/3.” These were made under subcontract by the J.S. Richardson Company (Richardson-Inland). On most of the later grips, a larger Ordnance escutcheon was stamped on the right side rather than on the bottom of the grip as found on the earlier examples. The configuration of many of the later grips was also somewhat different than the earlier examples.
  3. The inside of the metal buttplate had a drawing number cast (not stamped). The number, “B257614,” was followed by an asterisk-shaped marking enclosed in a circle (sometimes described as a wagon wheel) followed by a one- or two-digit number. This marking is often rather indistinct and can be hard to read. Reproduction M1A1 buttplates are usually unmarked although some fakes may be noted with a stamped (not cast) number.
  4. The early stocks typically had a circled “P” proofmark stamped on the rear of the stock. This marking was not generally found on the later stocks. It should be noted that many of the post-war rebuilt stocks had a proofmark applied as part of the overhaul procedure, but this was often a block letter “P” (not enclosed in a circle).
  5. The leather cheek pad was neatly attached to the stock and secured by rivets. Some rivets marked “7/4” have been observed, and these are believed to have been automotive brake shoe rivets made by Inland. Early rivets for the M1A1 cheek pad were typically made of brass, while most of the later rivets were made of Parkerized steel and usually painted brown to match the leather. The leather of the original cheek pads was fairly thin, and some original stocks have deteriorated or damaged pads. Some owners choose to replace the missing or damaged pads with newly made leather pads. Original leather pads will show evidence of factory-quality workmanship, whereas many of the replaced pads are somewhat ill-fitting or fabricated using leather that is too thick and/or too light in color.


After World War II, large numbers of carbines, including many M1A1s, remained in Uncle Sam’s arsenal and later saw use during the Korean War in the early 1950s. Although there were no selective-fire (M2) variants of the M1A1 Carbine manufactured, there have been some post-war overhauled M1A1 stocks noted with the inside of the stock routed out to accommodate the M2 Carbine’s fire-selector lever.

A number of M1A1 Carbines were subsequently supplied to American allies after World War II under various military assistance programs. Some of these saw action in the hands of French paratroopers in Indochina, including the ill-fated defense of Dien Bien Phu. Some M1A1 Carbines were later used by American troops and our South Vietnamese allies during the Vietnam War.

Few U.S. martial arms are as popular with today’s collectors as the M1A1 Carbine. The M1A1’s historic background, association with the elite airborne units, limited availability and unique appearance combine to make it a highly sought-after, and usually rather expensive, martial arm. A genuine M1A1 Carbine is one of the classic American arms of the Second World War and a true collector’s prize.

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