.223Savage
Member
I literally dug it up as I found it in a local park while metal detecting.
The head markings show a R^L at 12 o'clock and C and II at 6 o'clock. My initial internet research shows these markings to indicate the case was manufactured at the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, England and was loaded with cordite propellant and a Mk II type soft point bullet. Apparently this type of round was only manufactured from 1893 - 1898 as being a soft point, it ran afoul of the "Rules of War" of the era. The neck was cracked but I can't tell if that was from being fired or simply from being in the ground so long. It was only a couple of inches below the surface which is a bit odd but between floods and construction in the area there may have been a lot of soil movement.
I wish the case could tell the story of how it got to be in a park in Calgary.
The head markings show a R^L at 12 o'clock and C and II at 6 o'clock. My initial internet research shows these markings to indicate the case was manufactured at the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, England and was loaded with cordite propellant and a Mk II type soft point bullet. Apparently this type of round was only manufactured from 1893 - 1898 as being a soft point, it ran afoul of the "Rules of War" of the era. The neck was cracked but I can't tell if that was from being fired or simply from being in the ground so long. It was only a couple of inches below the surface which is a bit odd but between floods and construction in the area there may have been a lot of soil movement.
I wish the case could tell the story of how it got to be in a park in Calgary.