Swedish Mauser 96 Weapons Officer Rifle

Rob

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Sharing a few photos of a Swedish Mauser 96 Weapons Officer's rifle 6.5x55 (sporterized in Sweden) that I recently picked up on the EE.

Thanks to Svenska Arméns Rulla (1925 Ed. page 142) we know that the rifle was assembled by and became the private property of Löjtnant Nils Åkerhielm of the 15th Infantry Regiment (Kungliga Älvsborgs Regimente), a member of the Swedish nobility. Löjtnant Åkerhielm is listed as having completed the GBK (Kurs för utbildande gevärsbesiktningsofficerare - trans: course for training rifle inspection officers) and serving as a regimental weapons officer (VapOff.) He is also listed as FriH (Friherre) indicating nobility. ("Friherre" corresponds to the rank of Baron and is used in written Swedish. In spoken Swedish, "Baron" is now generally used.)

Åkerhielm's name and initials (N.A. and NSA) are stamped on all parts of his rifle: on the bolt and bolt shroud, bolt stop, receiver and barrel, rear sight base, trigger and sear, the firing pin, the trigger guard assembly and floorplate. As is the cross stamp, signifying a part taken out of military service, sometimes alone, sometimes stamped directly on top of a crown mark. The barrel has two stamps of "23" and three other proof marks as well as the initials NA on the bottom. The receiver is dated 1923.

The sporter stock that came with the rifle is a commercial Husqvarna beechwood stock from the 1950's intended for the their FN 98 series of rifles, modified to fit a 96 by moving the recoil lug slightly further back into the stock.

The bolt handle is modified to a slight curve down and to the rear, likely to make the rifle a bit more compact and for ease of cycling rather than for scope use, as it is not low enough for that. The 2-stage military trigger has been safely modified to a no-creep single stage with a very consistent pull weight of 3 lb. The cocking piece has been shortened and there is no safety. I have some 96 safeties in the parts bin and might find one that will fit.

A previous owner removed a Norma/Hellqvist peep sight (windage and elevation adjustable) soldered onto the rear receiver bridge. I have a few of these peep sights and can replace it, but I am probably just going to put a standard military ladder sight and slider back on it. In one of the photos, I placed a Hellqvist sight on the rifle, however it's not actually fastened down. The front ramp has a very tall flat top blade and should work with the military open sight for average 100-200 yard distances. The ramp looks like a Husqvarna part.


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I really like the looks of that rear sight!

I have them on a few other rifles and I like them. Simple, solid and very easy to adjust. For windage, releasing one locking screw at the rear (see second photo below) allows the sight to slide in the dovetail. For elevation changes, the peep itself turns to raise or lower the sight. Some have a slot on top for a screwdriver. There is a small locking screw for this as well. Some of these sights are marked Hellqvist and some are marked Norma. (I think Hellqvist, the designer of the sight, worked at Norma.)

I find rifles a lot handier without the bulk of a scope. I shot my best Blacktail buck with iron sights...in the pouring rain at about 50 yards.

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Love my M96. Every swede loves to bubba their rifle which I understand they were allowed to do with their reserve unit issued rifles.
 
Rob, Very nice rifle! I have one in full dress that came from Buffdog's collection. On mine, instead of a name, there is a number, 990201. The number does not correspond with the serial number range, nor does it match up with the date of the rifle action. All parts have the "+" stamped on them. Receiver is a 1913.

Thanks for sharing those excellent pics!
 
These are very interesting rifles that were hand-made with special care and oversight. I have a friend in Minnesota who has (or had) two unsporterized examples. I'm surprised at the stock clearance around the barrel stub - is it very generous or are my eyes deceiving me?
 
Those last two photos are of the old stock...since replaced.

Like I said:

"...the sporter stock that came with the rifle from Sweden. It is just a commercial Husqvarna beechwood stock from the 1950's intended for the their FN 98 series of rifles that has been very simply modified to fit a 96 by moving the recoil lug slightly further back into the stock.In the last photo you can see the gap for the larger 98 receiver. For now, I have replaced it with a good condition French walnut Husqvarna Model 46 stock. It's a better fit than the heavy, bulky M-98 beech stock. If I come across a good condition walnut M-96 stock set, I may restore the rifle to full military, or just just leave it as is..."

Well that will teach me to read every line - something I rarely do when I come on the scene after a few posts!

Great pics. Always a shame when something is altered, but it remains a very interesting rifle.

If you ever seek to restore it more closely to its original, I have several Swedish Mauser military stocks and handguards (both M96 and M38), but maybe not with all the fittings.
 
I have inserted the Nils Åkerhielm rifle into the Gunboards Swedish Weapon Officer's Rifle Listing.
There is another list for the M94 carbines.
(thank you superbee)

Feb. 2021 update

Additions and/or corrections are welcome



m/1896 Rifle

1898 m/96 = Unk (555745) (Walter Borg)

1909 m/96 = N. Sandberg

1910 m/96 = CMB (C.J.M. Björnstjerna) AM

1910 m/96 = Koskull Pvt

1911 m/96 = Grubb Pvt

1912 m/96 = G. Lund Pvt

1912 m/96 = H. W. (Facebook Listing)

1916 m/96 = R.A. (Carl Ragnar Askling)

1917 m/96 = A. Gyllencreutz (KA4) (Walter Borg H17)

1917 m/96 = O. Haastrup

1917 m/96 = A. Orrling

1917-18 m/96 = Y. Rydbeck

1919 m/96 = Harald Rydstrom

1922 m/96 = Uno Dunér

1922 m/96 = H. Schultz-Steinheil

1923 m/96 = Nils Åkerhielm, Löjtnant, (FriH )

1930 m/96 = Ivar Borén (Armé Museum)

1930 m/96 = M. Björlin

1930 m/96 = HK

1930 m/96 = S. Wassberg

1932 m/96 = Bertil Dybeck Pvt

1932 m/96 = D. Hernalin

1932 m/96 = Folke Ripa

1940? m/96 = H.O. Torell (See Note 1) (Armé Museum)

Undated m/96 = H.Cornelius (Blank receiver) Pvt (Carl Hararld Cornelius attended Tygofficerskurs 1941-42)

Unk m/96 = H.W. (Bastman Auktion 10/81)

Unk m/96 = H. Krautmeyer ( Swedish auction)

Unk m/96 = Alrek Sundström ( Swedish Auction)

Unk m/96 = W. Haij

Unk m/96 = Peter Koch

Unk m/96 = E. Kugelberg

Unk m/96 = Y.T. (Bastman Auktion 03/84)

Unk m/96 = Aksel Pauly

m/1938 Short Rifle

1901 m/38 = Bo Wijkmark (VOK class of 1942) Pvt

Unclassified

1898 m/94 = Unk (#102)

1898 m/94 = Unk (#103)
 
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Gorgeous!

Do officers still carry rifles?

I was trying to follow along in the Crown Jewels book about these rifles - as I think I understand, they were not "issued" or "carried" - these rifles were built as part of the training / exam / accreditation to become an Inspection Officer at the Swede Arsenal, I think.
 
Excellent buy!
only about 40 Mauser 96 weapons officer rifles known world wide.

It might be true that only 40 have become known on some places in the Internet, but no-one could ever verify that, and hopefully there are many presently unaccounted for that still exist.

Every military armorer ("Weapons Officer") that went through school made a M94 or M96 (I’ve never seen a M38) for his final project, and got to customise the serial number and take the rifle as his own weapon (usually home with him after service). They were quite a few made and it seems that most families hung on to them. These guns became the property of the person who made it, and sadly (but understandably) a great number became sporterized. When guns laws changed in Sweden limiting the number and type of firearms that could be owned, a great number of Swedish rifles hit the market and came to North America, and it's that trade that brought us many of these interesting rifles.
 
When guns laws changed in Sweden limiting the number and type of firearms that could be owned, a great number of Swedish rifles hit the market and came to North America, and it's that trade that brought us many of these interesting rifles.


Current Swedish Gun Limits (from Anders).

6 guns on a hunting licence.

10 handguns and 8 rifles/shotguns on a target shooting license.

No limit on how many guns on a collectors license.

When you reach a certain amount (?) of guns a sheet metal gun cabinet is not enough. You need an actual safe.

Pre-1890 muzzle loading guns are not licenced.
 
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