Actual war bring backs - 1916 Artillery Luger and Colt 1911

louthepou

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Hi folks,

Well, I don't see these ones too often. And they have a documented story.

Friend of mine took care of two guns which belonged to his grandfather, a WW1 veteran.

According to what my friend told me, the Colt Government was given to his grandfather when he went to Russia in 1918 at the end of WW1 (along with a few other Canadians, joining a larger US group) after having spent some time in western Europe. He came back with it.

The Luger is one, according to the 1946 registration form his grandfather filled, which he "found on the battlefield" sometime during WW1. Along with the copy of the registration request form, my friend also found the actual registration certificate. The expiry date is July 1st, 1950. you think the CFC will still have that in their records? :) This is probably one of the nicest ones we could ever dream of finding, I would think. Blueing is really nice, all numbers match - from the firing pin down to the wooden stock. Bore is clean, crisp rifling. The only defect I can see is a missing piece of the magazine bottom part (wood).

Lieutenant-Colonel Eugene-Joseph Nantel was born in 1894 in St-Jérome, QC. In 1940, he contributed to the war effort once again, as the "premier commandant" of the St-Jérôme company (part of the Regiment de Joliette), which would train recruits. He stayed in this position until 1942.








 
nice hardware Question for you on the luger Restricted or prohibited? I am never too sure. My uncle tried to pass on one to me but was prohibited. I asked the CFC what made it that way Cal. or barrel length or both all I got was Prohibited. no answer to the question
it was I think (been a while) 7. something which I take to be .380 or there abouts.
 
nice hardware Question for you on the luger Restricted or prohibited? I am never too sure. My uncle tried to pass on one to me but was prohibited. I asked the CFC what made it that way Cal. or barrel length or both all I got was Prohibited. no answer to the question
it was I think (been a while) 7. something which I take to be .380 or there abouts.

That artillery Luger above has a long barrel which is much longer than a prohibited 105 mm and shorter (Sec.84.1 of the Criminal Code of Canada). That makes it simply restricted. Your uncle's Luger was most likely a regular Luger with a barrel length of 4 inches which is slightly less than 105 mm. That's why every infantry "regular" Luger (unmodified) is a prohibited handgun in this country. None of the Luger caliber cartridges are prohibited (7.65x21 or 9x19 mm Parabellum).
 
I had a p38 given to me as unregistered. I promptly registered it, and was informed it was already registered.....last activity on it was 1958. So their records are far reaching.


Very nice pistols!!
 
Very nice, thanks for sharing. It's really fantastic and something else when you can trace back the owner of a military firearm. If you don't have the mans service records shoot me a pm, I could help you attain them. Also a colt letter would be a nice add on to it.
 
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