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With a serial number that dates to 1943, the Remington Rand in the Vault has what collectors consider Type 3 slide markings, a very crisp “FJA” Ordnance inspector’s mark of Col. Switch & Signal, and even the Singer Sewing Machine company would produce over 1.8 million of these iconic handguns during the conflict, it was Remington Rand that delivered the most to Uncle Sam. While Colt, Ithaca, railway equipment maker U.S. The company received drawings, gauges and tooling from the Army’s Springfield Armory, which had been previously used to manufacture M1911s and converted their “C” Division typewriter plant and warehouse in 1942 to war production. However, as with other gadget and widget makers, during WWII they retooled to help crank out the Arsenal of Democracy and win the war.įor Remington Rand, this meant making M1911A1 pistols, the standard U.S. Remington Rand, not to be confused with Remington Arms, was a business machine company formed in a merger between the Remington Typewriter Company and Rand Kardex Corporation during the Roaring Twenties. 45 certainly has a lot to say just by looking at it. While the golden rule in used firearms is “buy the gun, not the story,” this Government Issue. The gun came to us from the family of a man who was reportedly a B-17 bomber pilot during the conflict. One of the more interesting guns that have come through the Vault in recent months is a World War II-era Remington Rand M1911A1. This 1943 Remington Rand M1911A1 is striking.
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