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Bayonets

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WWI British ‘P13’ Mk1 Sword, Bayonet and Scabbard. BAYO 174. - BAYO 174
This is a great example of the ‘P13’ bayonet, which although designated ‘P13’, fit the ‘P14’ rifle and was not introduced until ‘1916’. It is marked to the blade with ‘1913’ over ’11 16’ (November 1916) and ‘Remington’ in a circle. The other side of the blade carries British inspection stamps. The vast majority of these bayonets were made in America by ‘Remington and Winchester’ with only a few made in England by ‘Vickers’. The wooden grips have two groove on either side to distinguish it from the ‘P1907’. The scabbard is leather with a steel locket *slight movement* and chape. A very nice collectable ‘1913’ bayonet with matching scabbard in excellent condition. See ‘Skennerton’ item B239, pages 192-194. The price includes U.K. delivery. BAYO 174. (Box 3)
£245.00

*RARE* British Experimental Bayonet, For The Farquhar-Hill Automatic Rifle. Sn 10880:39. - 10880:39
A British Experimental Bayonet for the Farquhar-Hill Rifle (no scabbard). These bayonets were made by shortening an existing 1097 pattern bayonet and re-shaping the tip for the trials in 1924 but very few were done at the time. We believe to be a later conversion and would still fill a gap in any serious British collection. The bayonet is a shortened 1907 pattern bayonet. It has a single edge blade with fullers that reach the tip. The tip is shaped. It has a straight cross guard with muzzle ring. The ricasso is stamped on one side with the War Department 'Crows Foot' and inspection marks and on the other it has "1907 8 15 Remington", (August 1915). The bayonet has slab wood grips and they are secured with two screw bolts. The pommel has a push button release. The bayonet has a 7 ½ " blade and is 12 ½ " overall. It has no scabbard. (see page 203 in Skennerton's British & Commonwealth Bayonets Book). The price includes UK delivery. Sn 10880:39. (Box 3)
£495.00

*Scarce* Sabre Bayonet for the Model 1859 Sharps Rifle with Scabbard and Leather Frog. 21421. - 21421
Sharps rifles are a series of large-bore, single-shot, falling-block, breech-loading rifles, beginning with a design by Christian Sharps in 1848 and ceasing production in 1881. They were renowned for long-range accuracy. By 1874, the rifle was available in a variety of calibres, and it was one of the few designs to be successfully adapted to metallic cartridge use. There were at least three different bayonets for the Sharps. Two different Sabre bayonets and the standard triangular bayonet. Two of the major manufacturers of the sabre bayonet were; Collins & Co, Hartford Connecticut and Ames MFG.Co Chicopee Massachusetts. This example has a 50 ½ cm blade (62 ¼ cm overall) and a brass ribbed hilt stamped ‘44’. The blade is in good overall condition with areas showing its age. The scabbard is leather and intact. The throat is brass coloured as is the chape *later replaced*. The rare frog is in very good order with brass and stitching intact. The price for this very scarce set includes UK delivery. 21421. (Bucket)
£675.00

British 1903 Un-converted Pattern Bayonet Land MkI Scabbard and Frog Manufactured by Mole. 21431. - 21431
In the 1902 financial year, 375 each of the short and long experimental models were made for trials. The short model was a trials version of the eventual patt. It was the short version that was eventually decided upon for introduction with the new short rifle. Provisionally approved on 14th December 1902, the pattern 1903 sword bayonet was announced in the list of changes para, 11716 with an approval date of 19th December. Made at Enfield (unconverted) the blade length is; 30½ cm (42 cm overall) and is in good overall condition. The WD arrow is above EFD and crown to one side and crown over 1903 and numerous inspection stamps. The wooden grips are held with two pins both inspection stamped. The pommel has ‘3’ 05’ imprinted (manufactured March 1905) and Mole (manufacturers of the 1903 were Wilkinson, Enfield, Sanderson and Mole who made the least amount) with inspection stamps to the other side and spine. See Watts & White pages 322 & 391 No 814 for reference. The scabbard is land pattern MKI and is in good overall condition with the stitching in place. The frog is good overall with all straps, buckles and stitching in place. The price includes UK delivery. 21431. (Box 3)
£375.00

*Scarce Wrongly Dated 1918* U.S. Model ‘1917’ Remington Bayonet and Scabbard. 21432. - 21432
This is a nice clean ‘P1917’ dated ‘1918’ by Remington in error. Remington mistakenly used the manufacture date 1918 in place of the pattern designation. The bayonet should be stamped ‘1917’ .This error was soon rectified and 1918 stamped ‘P17’ bayonets are scarce. The bayonet made in ‘WWII’ for the ‘P17 30-06’ rifle. It can be differentiated from the ‘P13’ which it resembles by the markings on the blade. This example is marked to the blade with ‘1918’ over Remington in a circle, meaning manufacture by ‘Remington’ (founded in 1816 by Eliphalet Remington (as E. Remington and Sons) in Ilion, New York, it was one of the oldest gun makers in the US and claimed to be the oldest factory in the US that still made its original product) who made over 2 million bayonets. The other side of the blade carries the flaming grenade and eagles head over ‘U, S’. and inspection marks. The grips are wooden *with minor age related marks* with two grooves cut across them which is where it resembles the ‘P13’ and was interchangeable with the ‘P13’ except for the ‘P17’ rifle being 30.06 instead of the British .303. The scabbard which is solid with stitching intact is the standard American ‘P17’ version with belt hooks attached and U.S. government inspector mark "EJB" to the rear. These bayonets were often issued to the Home guard in WWII. See ‘Skennerton’ item B289 page 236. A scarce piece, for the collector. The price includes U.K. delivery. 21432. (US Bayonets)
£425.00

British No7 Mk1/L Bayonet Scabbard and Webbing Frog. BAYO 791. - BAYO 791
This is a British No7 Mk1/L bayonet with brown tufnol grips. The No7 bayonet was only approve for land service hence the suffix L to the bayonet designation No7 Mk1/L. This is stamped crisply on the blade ricasso. These bayonets were mainly issued to the Guards and occasional use with the Mk5 Sten gun. The bayonet has a swivelling pommel which allowed it to be fixed to the No4 rifle and the Sten sub machine gun. The blade is the standard bowie shape as used on the No5 jungle carbine and successive marks including the No9 and L1A1 series. The scabbard is the standard No5 Mk2 with a brass mouthpiece. The webbing frog is in good order with all stitching intact. See Skennerton pages 243/44, item B299. The price includes UK delivery. BAYO 791. (Box 3)
£375.00
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