During WWII the 6th Canadian infantry division was trained first on commonwealth weapons (smle, bren, piat, etc.) then was switched to usgi issue (garand, bar, bazooka, etc.) in preparation for the invasion of japan. The rationale was to ease supply of weapons and supplies by standardization for all troops in the invasion. It was a precursor to the NATO standardization we see today. My father trained on the commonwealth set and was switched to the usgi set and in the process of retraining when the war ended and they set the weapons aside to await demobbing.
Could be. Could also be from the Garands that were procured for the Cdn Army Pacific Force in WW2. I used to shoot with an ex-RCAF service policeman in the late 1970s who told me that he was issued with both BARs and M1 Garands while employed on airbase defence duties in Europe in the 1950s.
The primary US Army sniper rifle in use in Korea was the M1C Garand which was fitted with one of a M81, M82 or Lyman Alaskan scope. The M1D sniper variant may have seen some use towards the end. All of these had straight optical scopes, no IR stuff. The M3 Carbine was fitted with an IR scope and did see some use in Korea by the US Army. It was kind of a poor lashup for sniping use given the limited accuracy and range of the M1 Carbine round. Some of these could have made their way into Cdn hands in an "unofficial" way, but the standard Cdn Army snipers rifle in Korea was the No4Mk1 (T) Lee-Enfield.At home I have a book written about Canadian Army sniper rifles that were officially issued. It was stated in there, that M1 rifles with IR-NVG were kept for night actions during the Korean War. Yes, it specifically said M1 rifles. I wonder if this was a typing mistake? Did the author mean to say M1-M2 carbines? Or was it otherwise?
I don't really know.
I have seen one pic of a Cdn soldier in Korea (period picture) which depicts him fraternizing with a Korean boy. The soldier has a No4Mk1(T) L E rifle with a custom buttstock attached. From what I recall it had a higher comb and nice pistol grip, such as you would see on a good quality target rifle.
Wondering what is with the thick soles on the soldier's boots - is he wearing his parade boots, or was he wearing some sort of hobnailed self soled combat boots? I don't know very much about Korean War era/ post Korean War era Cdn combat uniforms other than to assume it was a mixture of 1937 pattern clothing / webgear and later developments.
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