Number of Lee-Enfields in Canada?

I am sure there were (+)2 million before registration and more then 1/2 of them disappeared when C-68 came into affect.
 
Only our friends at the CFC know, well maybe to the nearest 10,000 or so.:rolleyes: Just for fun you should try an Access to Information Request with them and see what happens.;)

i wonder if it might fly , if a person applied for research funding to the gov , and wrote a paper that detailed how the lee-enfield rifle has transfromed it's use within canada , and transformed canada , then applied for the freedom of information act for numbers as to how many enfields where left within canada ...............

make it sound good on paper and it might fly :D
 
Registered Lee Enfields

Find out the number of registered and muliply by 3. Based on experience of other countries, I am guessing that about a third are registered.

Yes. With the original $25 registration fee, I could just see lots of people lining up to plunk down $25 to register a Lee Enfield that they bought for $14.95 from Eatons or Sears.

Speaking of which, I was at a Gun Shop when three people came in. This was an estate where an older lady had passed away, and when they opened up the closet, way back at the back was a Parker Hale sporterized Lee Enfield, unfired, complete with box, hang tags, and original string around the box. They wanted to sell it or dispose of it.

She had apparently ordered some BLINDS for her windows from Sears, almost 40 years ago, and someone at Sears had sent her the Parker Hale Lee Enfield instead. She was afraid to send it back, and it sat in her closet for almost 4 decades, until she passed away.

Gun control at it's finest.
 
Yes. With the original $25 registration fee, I could just see lots of people lining up to plunk down $25 to register a Lee Enfield that they bought for $14.95 from Eatons or Sears.

Speaking of which, I was at a Gun Shop when three people came in. This was an estate where an older lady had passed away, and when they opened up the closet, way back at the back was a Parker Hale sporterized Lee Enfield, unfired, complete with box, hang tags, and original string around the box. They wanted to sell it or dispose of it.

She had apparently ordered some BLINDS for her windows from Sears, almost 40 years ago, and someone at Sears had sent her the Parker Hale Lee Enfield instead. She was afraid to send it back, and it sat in her closet for almost 4 decades, until she passed away.

Gun control at it's finest.

And when that Parker Hale Lee Enfield is melted down by the Federal Government, our streets will finally be safe.
 
Cooeys

Or better yet..How many Cooey single shots AND Lee-Enfields in Canada?:stirthepot2:

COOEY, a relatively minor firearms manufacturer by a lot of comparisons, made over 6 million firearms alone. While some of these would have gone out of the country, the majority of this production would have stayed in Canada, for Canadian owners.

With the widespread distribution by Gun Shops, Eatons, Sears, and various Hardware chains, the Cooey single shot rifle was a Canadian Institution.

Long Branch made almost a million Lee Enfield rifles, and I have a Savage Lee Enfield bolt in the 90C ###X range. Not all of these rifles stayed in Canada, but a good percentage of them did. And, they were sold as surplus, along with Lee Enfields from other manufacturers. When I grew up in the 50s, $9.95 would get you your choice from a long wall rack in larger stores, or simply a large barrel in smaller ones.
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I bet you could count almost 24 000 alone on CGN, i think there is more than that, I have 8 myself of different vintages and know about at least 60 more in my neck of the woods..
 
I honestly think there are 200,000-300,000 in Canada alone. For every one registered I bet there are three unregistered. How many know guys who said,"I didn't bother to register the old .303, it's only worth $75." I know quite a few and how many keep one at the camp stuffed under a matress or overhead in a hiding place?
 
There were 16 million produced in the world.
So, here's some math based on population, and assuming 80% of them have been destroyed since a bunch of them were manufactured a century ago.

Code:
COUNTRY         POPULATION     16mil  %   80% DESTROYED
Australia       21,431,800      168,898       33,780
Canada          33,311,400      262,518       52,504
France          62,277,432      490,792       98,158
India        1,139,964,932    8,983,766    1,796,753
Italy           59,832,179      471,522       94,304
Iraq            30,711,152      242,027       48,405
Ireland          4,425,675       34,878        6,976
Malaysia        27,014,337      212,893       42,579
Nepal           28,809,526      227,040       45,408
New Zealand      4,268,900       33,642        6,728
Ottoman Empire  35,000,000      275,826       55,165
Pakistan       166,111,487    1,309,081      261,816
South Africa    48,687,000      383,690       76,738
United Kingdom  61,414,062      483,988       96,798
United States  307,006,550    2,419,439      483,888
Total        2,030,266,432   16,000,000

I'd bet there are around 24000 registered in Canada.

:D When I was in Unversity they called this Voodoo math :D

there are some fairly sweeping assumptions made here.

I would suggest that there are a lot more then 24000 registered in Canada.

there were a lot imported back into Canada and sold off after the war as sporting rifles.

Longbranch and Savage together produced over 2 million enfields and although most of those went overseas some stayed here for training and in depos. Also when the troops came back they did bring their rifles back for demobilization so they all went into storage.

My gut fealing is that there are around a million enfields in Canada and perhaps 25% are registered.
 
I have heard numbers suggesting 21 million legal guns in Canada, so the 3 to 1 ratio for registered sounds about right.
 
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