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M1917 bayonet | |
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U.S. military bayonets of the Great War (World War I). Shown is the U.S. Bayonet M1905 affixed to the 1903 Springfield Rifle and the U.S. Bayonet M1917 affixed to the Model 12 Winchester Trenchgun (12 gauge pump shotgun). | |
Type | Bayonet |
Service history | |
Used by | United States United Kingdom |
Wars | World War I Banana Wars World War II Korean War Vietnam War |
Production history | |
Manufacturer | Remington Arms Winchester Arms Eddystone Arms General Cutlery Canadian Arsenals Limited |
Produced | 1910s–1930s, 1960s |
No. built | ~2,000,000 |
Specifications | |
Mass | 1 lb. 2 oz. (511 g) |
Scabbard/sheath | M1917 scabbard |
The M1917 bayonet was designed to be used with the US M1917 Enfield .30 caliber rifle, as well as with the seven different U.S. trench shotguns. The blade was 17 inches (43.2 cm) long. It will not fit the M1903 .30 caliber (Springfield) or the M1 .30 caliber (Garand) US service rifles as they have different bayonet ring (barrel) and attachment stud dimensions.
History[edit]
The M1917 bayonet was used first during World War I by American soldiers on the Western Front. A sword bayonet design, the M1917 bayonet design was based on the British Pattern 1913 bayonet, itself derived from the Pattern 1907 bayonet, which incorporated a long 17-inch blade. While designed primarily for the M1917 rifle, the bayonet was fitted for use on all the 'trench' shotguns at the time. Note the that the M1917 bayonet and the British Pattern 14 bayonet from which it was derived were not interchangeable, and the two transverse cuts on the M1917 grips were meant to provide easy recognition in the dark.
It has deep markings on the metal including “flaming bombs” and “eagle heads” that add to the historical value of the rifle. The rifle comes with a Model 1917 Bayonet & M1917 Type 4 Scabbard that also have deep markings on them. This Winchester Model 1917 is a nice package and will add to your military collection. Bayonet has original markings. Finish as described above – all original. The scabbard is a hard to find early model, manufactured through late 1917 (well before production of the bayonet and M1917 rifle got really going).
The M1917 was used frequently during the several different Banana Wars.
The U.S. continued to use the World War I-made M1917 bayonets during World War II because of large stockpiles left over. The new Trench Guns being procured and issued were still designed to use the old M1917 bayonet.
The bayonet was again called on during the Korean War for issue with the various Trench guns still in service.
In a strange twist of fate, in 1966 procurement orders were let for brand new production M1917 bayonets. The contracts were issued to General Cutlery of Fremont, Ohio and Canadian Arsenals Ltd., the old Long Branch Arsenal of Quebec, Canada. Stockpiles had finally run out, and new Winchester 1200 trench shotguns were being issued. These were used in limited quantities during the Vietnam War.
It was not until towards the end of the Vietnam war that new Military shotguns were designed to use the newer knife bayonets. Such as the Stevens Model 77E with the M5 Bayonet, or the United States Marine Corps'Model 870 Mark 1' shotgun with the M7 bayonet
Weapons the M1917 Bayonet was used with[edit]
- Winchester Model 1897 trench gun
- Winchester Model 1912 trench gun
- Stevens Model 520-30 trench gun
- Stevens Model 620 trench gun
- Remington Model 10 trench gun
- Ithaca Model 37 trench gun
- Winchester Model 1200 trench gun
See also[edit]
External links[edit]
- Cunningham, Gary (July 2003). 'Collecting the US Bayonet, Model 1917'. UsMilitaryKnives.com.
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