OEWG is Oesterreichische Waffenfabriks Gesellschaft: Austrian Weapons-making Company.
They built Kropatschek rifles for the French Marines in 11x59R, same as the Gras cartridge, and a couple of contracts for Portugal in 8x60R, all blackpowder rounds, of course. The Krop then served as the basic model for the French Lebel, and so has far greater historical significance than one might think. The Lebel uses the entire Krop design, including Alfred Kropatschek's magazine system with its special no-double-feed interruptor, just with 2 forward locking-lugs on the detachable bolt-head and a very heavy receiver, much like the Swiss Vetterli, witha 2-piece stock.
The Krop rifes served as the main Portuguese rifle until the adoption of the Vergueiro/Mauser in 1904 but served in Portuguese overseas colonies until the 1960s. Total Portuguese Krops manufactured seems to be 49,000 rifles, 4800 short rifles and 4000 cavalry carbines. A few hundred of the survivors came to Canada in the early 1970s, but our glorious Government of the time prevented the ammunition from being sold, even as components, because it coud not be guaranteed as 100% sure-fire..... so they protected us in fine Trudeauvian fashion by ensuring that we couldn't get ANY. A small amount of ammo did show up and one occasionally encounters ingle rounds at gun shows, usually at from $1 to $4 a shot.
Capacity of the rifle was 8 in the tube mag, 1 on the carrier and 1 up the spout for a total of 10 rounds.It was the 'high-capacity assault weapon' of the 1880s.
Talquin is quite correct: you can make the ammo from 8mm Lebel brass (see Trade-Ex Canada ad and link at the top of this page) and, I am sure he will also tell you, they ar a LOT of fun to shoot.
BTW, you just might want to decipher some of those stamping burned into the woodwork; mine has only a factory cartouche on one side and a Royal signet on the other, yet the rifles saw use in the entire Portuguese Empire at one time: Goa, Macau, Portuguese East Africa (now Angola), Mozambique, the Mozambique Company administrative areas and so forth. Also, some of them were used for a time by the Deutsche Ost-Afrikanische Schutztruppe (they held more than the German single-shot Mausers) during the Great War. Who knows? The markings will tell. There were more than 150,000 British troops in that little side-show war; was your Grandfather one of them?
Try posting the markings and see if someone knows.
Hope this helps.
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