Is it ? Or no ? Snider Cavalry Carbine

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A curious early Carbine . Falls within all the parameters of NWMP issue . 1871 lock mK lll . Serial number falls between 2 authenticated issues . 415 and 494 . According to Klancher there is just no way to definitively say , yes or no . Some 330 examples out there Scattered all over from 400’s to 9000. Only solid markings are the DC and 19 . Aside from the typical British stampings . Someone’s initials punched in at some point . Aside from that apparently the Carbines are the most difficult to authenticate . A very nice clean example at any rate . Anyone with further info to share ?
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Unfortunately they were not stamped . Oddly enuff Klancher had no comment about the DC stamp . I’ve sent another email to him to clarify if authenticated examples had a DC while others , yes I am aware , did not .
 
I have documented almost 30 Mk III Cavalry carbines like yours, which have the I-broad arrow stamped in both the roundel on the buttstock and on the lock plate. Most are 1871 production, with a few from 1870. The I-broad arrow is a mark seen as a stores mark showing production for/acceptance in India. Curiously though, almost all of the examples I've tracked down are in Canada, or have a Canadian connection of some sort. Many are marked with the D.C. Canadian-ownership mark - a few within the diamond, but most without a diamond enclosure. Many also have a number adjacent to the D.C. marking (like your '19'). Having talked to David Edgecombe about them, and posting on several forums to try to glean knowledge - their exact provenance remains unknown/disputed. No indication of any connection to the NWMP on any examples I have documented.
 
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