Where's the shoulder thing that goes up, and can it do a 30 calibre magazine clip in half a second?
Where's the shoulder thing that goes up, and can it do a 30 calibre magazine clip in half a second?
Very Interesting piece of history ... thanks for posting.
Dit is 'n baie mooi geweer, ek wens net dat dit vir ons kan praat oor waar dit is, wat dit gedoen het, en met wie dit gedoen het nie.
tac
Don't be offended if im wrong, but im pretty sure thats Afrikaans
"Gun control is like trying to reduce drunk driving by making it tougher for sober people to own cars"
Yup, "This is a very nice gun, I just wish it could talk to us about where it has been, what it has done, and who did it." Loosely translated, my Afrikaans is very rusty.
Hey, dit is wonderlik om te'n ander Afrikaanssprekende te sien! Soos ek gesê het, watter wonderlike stuk real-Afrikaanse geskiedenis, maar met'n Kanadese verband, natuurlik [en Australiese en Britse daar iewers, ook!]
Beste wense uit die VK!
tac
what kind of mags does this thing take
Nice historical piece. Wonder how it ended up in Canada.
Oom Paul se roer
Last edited by blueskies; 10-09-2015 at 12:09 AM.
Last edited by blueskies; 10-09-2015 at 12:16 AM.
The South African War (1899-1902) or, as it is also known, the Boer War, marked Canada's first official dispatch of troops to an overseas war.
In 1899, fighting erupted between Great Britain and two small republics in South Africa. (See map) The two republics, settled by Boers, descendants of the region's first Dutch immigrants, were not expected to survive for long against the world's greatest power. Pro-Empire Canadians nevertheless urged their government to help. The war, they argued, pitted British freedom, justice, and civilization against Boer backwardness.
While many English-Canadians supported Britain's cause in South Africa, most French-Canadians and many recent immigrants from countries other than Britain wondered why Canada should fight in a war half way around the world. Concerned with maintaining national stability and political popularity, Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier did not want to commit his government. Yet the bonds of Empire were strong and public pressure mounted. As a compromise, Laurier agreed to send a battalion of volunteers to South Africa.
Over the next three years, more than 7,000 Canadians, including 12 women nurses, served overseas. They would fight in key battles from Paardeberg to Leliefontein. The Boers inflicted heavy losses on the British, but were defeated in several key engagements. Refusing to surrender, the Boers turned to a guerrilla war of ambush and retreat. In this second phase of fighting, Canadians participated in numerous small actions. Gruelling mounted patrols sought to bring the enemy to battle, and harsh conditions ensured that all soldiers struggled against disease and snipers' bullets.
Imperial forces attempted to deny the Boers the food, water and lodging afforded by sympathetic farmers. They burned Boer houses and farms, and moved civilians to internment camps, where thousands died from disease. This harsh strategy eventually defeated the Boers.
Of the Canadians who served in South Africa, 267 were killed and are listed in the Books of Remembrance. The Canadian government claimed at the time that this overseas expedition was not a precedent. History would prove otherwise. The new century would see Canadians serve in two world wars, the Korean War, and dozens of peacekeeping missions.
tac