Brief History and Production of the M1905 Springfield & M1 Bayonets | Collector's and History Corner

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  • Опубликовано: 9 мар 2016
  • ASP's Blog: (autoshowcaseproject.blogspot.com/)
    ASP PRESENTS:
    Brief History and Production of the M1905 Springfield and M1 Bayonets.
    Stan of the NJACC presents a brief history and production numbers of the M1905 Springfield Bayonets that were produced in the early 1910s up until after World War 2. The Springfield Bayonets were produced by various companies such as Union Fork & Hoe (UFH), American Fork & Hoe (AFH), Pal Blade & Tool (PAL), Oneida LTD (OL), Utica Cutlery (UC), and Wilde Drop Forge & Tool (WT). Each Springfield Bayonet has its own history and production process that makes them different and unique from each other. One of the most rare or "Holy Grail" bayonets seen in the video is the Oneida LTD bayonet. The Springfield Bayonet was created in response of the ram rod bayonet not being sturdy enough. Interesting enough, when the US entered World War 1, the Springfield Bayonets were blued or parkerized as the original silver shine would reflect light during the day by the sun and at night by the moon.
    The M1905 Springfield Bayonets soldiered on through the 20th century. Besides the US using the Springfield Bayonets, other nations such as Greece, Denmark, South Korea, and Taiwan just to name a few have used the M1905 Springfield Bayonets in their military arsenal.
    On top of the M1905 Springfield Bayonets, you cannot forget the M3 scabbards that housed them. Like the Springfield Bayonets, the scabbards were developed by various companies such as Beckwith Manufacturing Company and Detroit Gasket Company. Each scabbard has its own history and production process that makes them different and unique from each other.
    When World War 2 rolls around, the need for a shorter bayonet for the Americans was needed. The Americans cut down the existing M1905 bayonets to a short knife bayonet. You will hear of the M1905e and M1905e1 bayonets. After the adoption of the M1 Garand rifle, the Americans developed the M1 bayonet for the M1 Garand.
    If you are interested in collecting or are collecting Springfield Bayonets, please utilize the resources below as to steer clear from fakes or reproductions being sold as the real deals.
    FURTHER RESOURCES OF THE M1905 SPRINGFIELD BAYONETS:
    Online
    (www.usmilitaryknives.com/bayon...)
    (civilianmarksmanship.com/acces...)
    (www.fulton-armory.com//faqs/M1...)
    (www.thegca.org/pdfs/Bayonets4...)
    Books
    American Military Bayonets of the 20th Century by Gary Cunningham
    US Military Knives, Bayonets and Machetes by M.H. Cole
    The U.S. Krag Bayonets by Donald Hartman (ISBN 978-09823021-0-1)
    NJACC Website:
    (www.njacc.info/)
    SUBSCRIBE HERE FOR MORE: ( / gurilla47 )
    Become a Patron on Patreon!:
    (www.patreon.com/user?u=972155)
    FOLLOW ME ON GOOGLE+: (plus.google.com/u/0/+ChrisBut...)
    INSTAGRAM: ( / gurilla47 )
    Thanks for watching! Sound off in the comments below!
    TAGS
    Union Fork & Hoe, American Fork & Hoe, Pal Blade & Tool, Oneida LTD, Oneida Limited, Utica Cutlery, Wilde Drop Forge & Tool, Springfield Bayonet, M1 Garand Bayonet, M1 bayonet, M1903 Springfield Rifle, M1903 Springfield rifle bayonet, M1905 Springfield bayonet, M1905e bayonet, M1095e1 bayonet, Krag rifle, Krag rifle bayonet, World War 1, World War 2, Philippine Insurrection, stick bayonet, ram rod bayonet, musket bayonet, M1905/42 bayonet, M1905 Type IV bayonet, M1905 bayonet, M3 bayonet scabbard, Beckwith Manufacturing Company, Detroit Gasket Company, M1942 bayonet, M1943 bayonet, M1 bayonet

Комментарии • 62

  • @RexApplegate
    @RexApplegate Год назад +4

    My great great uncle carried one to WW1, and as mentioned my grandpa carried one with a fiberglass scabbard to the Philippines to shell the Japanese back to the stone age.
    My grandpa saw someone jump in a trench and accidentally get impaled by a 1905 on a Garand and die. Between that and the enormous cumbersome size it's no wonder to me why he ditched his at the end of the war.
    I split the ancestral difference and got an unissued 1905 made between the wars to hang on my wall with their pictures and my grandpa's dog tag.
    This is an exceptional video and I very much appreciate it.

  • @alanbower1193
    @alanbower1193 7 лет назад +20

    Good video to a point. The picture within picture is very annoying.

  • @blksubiesti
    @blksubiesti 10 месяцев назад +1

    I got a 1906 dated Springfield 03 and found a 1906 Springfield bayonet serialed within 1k of the same serial range as the rifle. Both right at the 150k serial range.

  • @jeremybowen5813
    @jeremybowen5813 7 лет назад +7

    I just bought a RIA bayonet dated 1910 with a serial number about 2000 higher than any published serial numbers that I can find for that year. Serial is 184683.

  • @darrylnelson6264
    @darrylnelson6264 5 лет назад +4

    You guys set me on a mission to buy every US bayonet made for each rifle from the Trapdoor to present day (one each). I also have several foreign bayonets for various guns like the SMLE, G2, K98K, Arisaka, K31, and other rifles. I watched this video at least three times now.

    • @stanleygurski7733
      @stanleygurski7733 5 лет назад

      I stARTED COLLECTING BAYONETS AT AGE 12 AND i AM NOW 71. ITS AN ADDICTION!

  • @JoeyP322
    @JoeyP322 8 лет назад +1

    Awesome video on history... Thanks so much

  • @dubyacwh7978
    @dubyacwh7978 8 лет назад +25

    I'm trying to watch this and see the differences in the rifle lengths and the picture in the picture is obnoxious!

    • @gunnerdan
      @gunnerdan 6 лет назад

      Dubya CWH at about 8:45 it goes away

    • @lj5673
      @lj5673 Год назад

      For real

  • @dalecarpenter8359
    @dalecarpenter8359 6 лет назад

    Very cool class ! Thank you !

  • @ponycarfan
    @ponycarfan 8 лет назад +5

    Excellent video and very informative. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @HistoryCollectorsForum
      @HistoryCollectorsForum  8 лет назад +1

      +ponycarfan Thanks for commenting! You can also check out the Krag-Jorgensen Bayonets video on my page for more bayonet love.

  • @TheAlice1865
    @TheAlice1865 8 лет назад +9

    Great video very informative. But what is all the rude chatter in the background?

  • @lj.7311
    @lj.7311 6 месяцев назад

    Great video. Appreciate it.

  • @maxwellpelcher3600
    @maxwellpelcher3600 6 лет назад +1

    Great video, very informative

  • @cbm2156
    @cbm2156 6 месяцев назад

    The troops ordered to Little Rock in 1958 to integrate the schools there by IKE was not the 82nd AB but the 101st AB Division.

  • @usmcnewdog98
    @usmcnewdog98 7 лет назад +3

    This guy is fantastic!

  • @mippymoo069
    @mippymoo069 Год назад

    great video you really know your bayonets its very interesting

  • @jasonkirkk
    @jasonkirkk 2 года назад +1

    Thank you

  • @tommyvinson6
    @tommyvinson6 6 лет назад

    Very interesting

  • @garyhammond2213
    @garyhammond2213 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the great information.

  • @bryanlau2697
    @bryanlau2697 3 года назад +2

    Great video! Tons of helpful info and interesting stories. I just got my hands on a 1943 Smith Corona 03-A3. What do you think would be the most appropriate bayonet? A 10" M1905 or an M1? Thanks!

    • @stang3787
      @stang3787 3 года назад +2

      Both are acceptable and appear in Army manuals. So get the first one you can afford.

  • @STEVEOMEMES
    @STEVEOMEMES 3 года назад

    Chris were can i find a web site of serial numbers an part ID for my 1903 Springfield ? THANK's

  • @marklehman9858
    @marklehman9858 5 лет назад

    Wilde Tool bayonets were date marked 1942 and 1943(one month production). All were made as 16 inch blades.
    UFH (marked UFH on back of hilt)cut most of these down to M1905E5 configuration, and some of the cut down blades from various different manufacturers were made in to rakes for victory gardens. Wilde tool was located in Kansas City.
    I have never seen a long Wilde Tool 1943 dated bayonet - only 1942 dated ones.

  • @nayasea3918
    @nayasea3918 5 лет назад

    GREAT VIDEO NOW I KNOW I HAVE THE MOST DESIRED RARE 1943 WT 16" BAYONET.

    • @stang3787
      @stang3787 5 лет назад

      Congratulations. My first
      WWII long bayonet was a WT and i did not find out until much later how rare it is.

    • @nayasea3918
      @nayasea3918 5 лет назад

      @@stang3787 Hi Stan do you know anyone who is interested in buying mine?

    • @stang3787
      @stang3787 5 лет назад

      @@nayasea3918 I would take it to a gun show. Don't take less than $200 for it if it is in good condition and you don't collect them and you could get $300.

    • @nayasea3918
      @nayasea3918 5 лет назад

      @@stang3787 ok thanks for the advice I greatly appreciate it have a great day.

  • @marklazaroff7213
    @marklazaroff7213 7 лет назад +1

    Great video. How about identification of cut down M3 scabbards. The original made scabbards 16" and 10" have a gap on the sides of the fiberglas just below the metal. The cut downs do not have the gaps - they have been cut away and the shorter fiberglas scabbard reinserted into the metal. So it is nice to have a cut down scabbard with a cut down bayonet.

    • @marklazaroff7213
      @marklazaroff7213 7 лет назад

      PS: Based on your numbers, I have a lot more bayonets to collect - a man only lives so long!

    • @stanleygurski7733
      @stanleygurski7733 6 лет назад

      That was supposed to be part of the presentation but I don't use a script and don't rehearsch.

  • @JoseSilva-ci2wb
    @JoseSilva-ci2wb 5 лет назад +1

    eu amo as baionetas militares

  • @chicorodriguez3964
    @chicorodriguez3964 5 лет назад

    I am a young man who collects bayonets my first purchase years ago is still amongst my favorites it's AFH 1942 in the video he mentioned the earlier versions having plastic handles but mine appears to be brown bakelite also the scabbard has that waffle bakelite look am I wrong because I have seen the black plastic handles also but he never mentioned bakelite being used

    • @stang3787
      @stang3787 5 лет назад

      Brown plastic is usually found on Wade Tool bayonets but it is a mix of black and brown. I have seen all brown grips on cut down bayonets so it might have been a replacement part.

    • @chicorodriguez3964
      @chicorodriguez3964 5 лет назад

      @@stang3787 the grips on mine are a brown and black mixture and further research has shown me that these were earlier prototypes that had been tested by the military and deemed unfit because the mixture of this plastic could be melted by the solvents used to clean up the highly corrosive ammo they used in those days I read this information in a book called American bayonet history it also said afh was not the only brand to let a few out so all brown handled bayonets are 1942

  • @briancanaday6109
    @briancanaday6109 Год назад

    I have a 1942 Wilde Tool bayonet 16" with the fiberglass scabbard. is it worth anything?

  • @geraldbarth2172
    @geraldbarth2172 5 лет назад

    Where was the MK2 for the carbine, and the german sword bayonet and the WWII serrated one?

  • @cannonball666
    @cannonball666 6 лет назад

    You failed to mention the M1942 bayonet which was 16" long and with scabbard marked USN Mark 1, but it is NOT the sheet metal training bayonet you spoke of. It is a true 16" bayonet used in the Pacific.

    • @stanleygurski7733
      @stanleygurski7733 5 лет назад +1

      USN MK I scabbards were often teamed up after the War with real bayonets as they are made the same except for markings. There is no truth that having a USN scabbard with a 16 inch real bayonet indicates Marine issue.

  • @ernestgiboo9006
    @ernestgiboo9006 3 года назад

    I have a a few questions about USN 16 inch Mark1 plastic bayonet.
    My grandfather Korean war vet gave me one at the bright young age of 12. I still have it.
    I always thought that they were made out of baked a light were they?
    I have the mark one scabbard usable shape.
    The bayonet blade is straight with no chips in the blade. To be honest it’s pristine in my eyes. One of the handles has a chip at the bottom right front corner of the handle.
    What would be the value? Or how rare with the specimen be.
    I can’t believe it’s in such good shape still. Because I used it as a toy.

    • @stang3787
      @stang3787 3 года назад +1

      Bakelite is a form of plastic.

  • @larry648
    @larry648 Год назад

    I have the M5 for my M1, but it is a 5,400,000 1954 production. It’s correct.

  • @dmcgill8978
    @dmcgill8978 6 лет назад +1

    Well I was wondering why I couldn't find the proper rifle for my USN MK 1 bayonet. Now I know why. One M1 bayonet down and 114 to go.

    • @stanleygurski7733
      @stanleygurski7733 6 лет назад

      Dunn Navy Training rifles do pop up at militaria stores, shows and auctions but they run from $100 to $200 and many show abuse by children who's fathers bought them after the war.

    • @blksubiesti
      @blksubiesti 3 года назад +1

      @@stanleygurski7733 ahhh how I miss the America where children’s dads bought them training rifles as toys and said go play outside with it.

  • @josephhyatt7664
    @josephhyatt7664 4 года назад

    It was the 101st at Little Rock not the 82nd

  • @MICHAEL-cg1yl
    @MICHAEL-cg1yl 4 года назад

    I WATCHED THIS VIDEO TO SEE IF I HAD A REPRODUCTION CUT DOWN BAYONET OR REPRODUCTION WAR PRODUCTION BAYONET FOR WW2 REENACTMENTS

  • @dnhman
    @dnhman 8 лет назад

    101AB at little rock?

  • @alanbud5181
    @alanbud5181 2 года назад

    Thanks for ruining the
    Demonstration with your closeups of a bayonet. We know what they look like

    • @IG10705
      @IG10705 Год назад

      Do you realize there's people that dont know? Maybe they're trying to match there's up to the ones in the video? Ever thought about any of that???

  • @sarge27271
    @sarge27271 5 лет назад +1

    PIP very annoying.

  • @Ndiver81
    @Ndiver81 5 лет назад +1

    Picture in picture sucks. Unnecessary distraction.